The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentscandid-dove-042

Got a ticket AT the crash scene — do I just pay it or will that screw my claim?

So this whole situation has me spiraling a little and I could use some real talk from people who've been through it.

I was in a collision a few weeks ago — the other driver came out of a side street and we hit each other in the intersection. While we're still standing there waiting for the tow truck, the responding officer hands ME a citation for an alleged improper lane change. I was honestly in shock and didn't even fully process it until I got home.

Now I'm sitting here with a few burning questions:

1. Does paying the ticket basically mean I'm admitting fault? My gut says yes, but I don't actually know if that's how it works legally. Like, does a paid traffic citation get used against me in the insurance process?

2. How do I even bring this up with my insurance company? I have to report the accident obviously, but do I just... mention the ticket casually? Try to explain my side? I don't want to say the wrong thing and torpedo my own claim before it even gets going.

3. Is this something my insurance handles, or do I need a separate attorney just for the ticket? I genuinely don't know if these are two completely different problems that need two different people, or if one person can handle both.

4. What happens to my claim if I'm found partially at fault? The other driver had a busted headlight that I think contributed to this, so I don't think fault is totally one-sided here.

I'm not a lawyer obviously and I've never dealt with anything like this. Anyone been in a similar spot? What did you actually do?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 11
    humble-fox-461

    This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with all of this on top of just recovering from the accident itself. The fact that you're asking questions instead of just paying the fine and hoping for the best is already the right instinct. Please don't go through this alone — even just one phone call to a lawyer for a free consult could make a huge difference.

  • 10
    bright-grouse-646

    Can I ask — did the officer actually witness the lane change, or are they going off what the other driver told them? Because that changes things quite a bit. If there's no dashcam or witness to back up the officer's version, contesting it seems pretty reasonable. Also, was there a police report filed? What does it say about contributing factors?

    • 7
      patient-dreamer913

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 19
    daring-wolf-504

    Here's the short version: don't pay the ticket yet, talk to a PI lawyer before you give your insurance company a detailed recorded statement, and document everything about that other driver's busted headlight if you haven't already. The headlight thing could actually be really important for your case. Get photos if you can still get them.

  • 12
    plain-lynx-214

    Just want to check — are you doing okay physically? Sometimes the shock of getting a citation at the scene distracts people from symptoms that show up days later. Adrenaline masks a lot. If you haven't been seen by a doctor yet, please go, even if you feel mostly fine. It matters for your health AND for any claim you might make.

    • 4
      weary-dreamer639

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 18
    warm-vole-849

    The traffic ticket and your personal injury or property damage claim really are two separate tracks. One is criminal/traffic court, the other is civil. What connects them is that a conviction (or a payment, which counts as a guilty plea in most states) on the traffic side can be introduced as evidence on the civil side. A lot of PI attorneys will either handle the ticket themselves or loop in a traffic attorney they work with — worth asking upfront when you call around.

    • 1
      steady-rider367

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 14
    bright-finch-820

    Former adjuster here. From my experience on the other side of the desk — yes, a paid citation absolutely gets noted in the file and it does influence how fault is allocated. That said, citations aren't the final word. Adjusters are supposed to do their own independent investigation. Photos, witness statements, the physical damage pattern — all of that matters. The ticket is one data point, not a verdict. That said, I'd still contest it if you have any real basis to do so.

  • 7
    swift-owl-147

    Please, please, please watch what you say to your own insurance company about that ticket. Adjusters are trained to get you to say things that lock in fault. You can report the accident without volunteering every detail about the citation. Stick to the basic facts of what happened and let them ask specific questions rather than you just narrating everything.

  • 5
    kind-lynx-379

    Oh man, I got a citation at the scene of my accident too and panicked the exact same way. First thing I'd say — do NOT just pay it without thinking it through. I almost did that because I wanted it off my plate, and my cousin who's been through this stuff talked me out of it. Contesting it bought me time while everything else got sorted out.

    • 9
      careful-elk-210

      Not legal advice, but this is actually a really common situation and the two issues — the ticket and the insurance claim — are somewhat separate but they can definitely affect each other. A paid ticket can be treated as an admission in a civil claim depending on your state. I'd strongly suggest at least a free consultation with a PI attorney before you do anything with that citation. Many will tell you what to do about the ticket too, or refer you to a traffic attorney.