The Shoulder
The Shoulder
68
careful-hare-968

Got sideswiped by a driver who took off — I'm relocating across the country in under two weeks

I'm still kind of shaking as I type this. This morning someone clipped the passenger side of my car in a strip mall parking lot and just... kept going. I ran out and managed to snap a photo of their plate before they turned onto the main road. Filed a police report and the officer told me the plate came back to a registered, insured vehicle — so that's something, I guess.

Here's where it gets messy for me personally. I'm moving from the Southeast to the Pacific Northwest in about 11 days. Everything — the car title, registration, insurance policy — is technically still in my mom's name. I'm 25 and she's been carrying me on her policy while I got settled after college. The move was always going to be the moment I switched everything over to myself, but now I have this accident hanging over it.

Some stuff I genuinely don't know:

  • Since I have the plate photo and a police report, does this still count as a hit-and-run claim? Or does the fact that they're insured change how it's handled?
  • If I transfer the title and get new insurance in my name before the repairs happen, does that mess up the claim?
  • Can the at-fault driver's insurance pay for repairs even if I've already moved out of state by then?
  • Should I wait on transferring everything until the claim is settled, or just go ahead and handle the move stuff?

It's just body damage — no injuries thankfully — but the timing couldn't be worse. I've never dealt with insurance for anything more than a fender bender and that was handled by my mom. Any advice from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now.

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9 replies

  • 12
    humble-marten-446

    I had almost the exact situation last year — car was still in my dad's name when I got rear-ended right before I moved states. Honestly, the claim process didn't care whose name was on the title as much as I thought it would. The other driver's insurance just wanted the police report and photos. I'd call your mom's insurance company first and let them guide you — they've seen this before.

  • 14
    silent-crane-959

    Heads up: even though you have the plate and a report, the other driver's insurance is going to look for any reason to lowball or drag their feet. They may try to say the damage is 'inconsistent' with the incident or ask for a recorded statement from you right away. Don't give a recorded statement without knowing your rights first. They are not on your side.

  • 17
    brave-crane-603

    Former adjuster here. The title being in your mom's name is a paperwork headache but not a dealbreaker — claims get filed on behalf of registered owners all the time. What matters more is that you have documentation: the plate photo, the police report number, and photos of the damage with timestamps. Get those organized NOW before anything else. And yes, repairs absolutely can be done in another state. The at-fault insurer will either send an adjuster or have you use an app to submit photos. Distance isn't the issue it used to be.

  • 19
    careful-dove-765

    On the title transfer question — I'd hold off on switching everything over until you at least open the claim formally. Not because it's illegal to transfer mid-claim, but because you don't want to create any confusion about who the 'claimant' is midway through. Once the claim is opened and documented under your mom's policy, you can usually proceed with life stuff. Just keep both her and her insurer in the loop. Also, make sure you're not driving uninsured during the gap — even a few days can create problems if something else happens.

    • 12
      cool-swan-758

      Not legal advice, but generally speaking: having a plate number and police report significantly changes your position compared to a true hit-and-run where the driver is never identified. You may have a direct claim against the other driver's liability coverage rather than needing to tap your own uninsured motorist coverage. The out-of-state move doesn't extinguish that. Worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney if the insurer gives you grief — most will do a quick call at no cost.

  • 6
    cool-crow-844

    You said no injuries, but please pay attention to your body over the next few days. Adrenaline from a stressful incident can mask soreness, especially in your neck and shoulders. If anything feels off — stiffness, headaches, weird tingling — don't brush it off. Moving is physically demanding too. Just... check in with yourself.

    • 5
      brave-tern-720

      Ugh, I'm so sorry — what awful timing on top of an already stressful move. I hope your mom is being supportive through this. Sounds like you did everything right at the scene, honestly. Hang in there.

    • 13
      bright-kestrel-066

      Quick question — did the officer actually make contact with the other driver, or just confirm the plate was registered and insured? There's a difference. If no one has talked to the driver yet, they could claim they had no idea they hit you, which makes the liability conversation more complicated. Do you know what the next step in the police report process is?

  • 9
    quiet-swan-853

    Three things: 1) File the claim today, not tomorrow. 2) Don't drive unregistered or uninsured at any point — get a short-term binder or overlap your policies. 3) Stop worrying about the title stuff and just call the insurance company. Most of your questions are going to be answered in that first call. The rest is noise.