The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
bright-elk-776

Guy merged into me on the highway and just kept going — am I on the hook for this??

So this happened about two weeks ago and I'm still kind of fuming about it. I was cruising on the interstate, completely minding my own business in the center lane, when this pickup truck basically squeezed himself in front of me without signaling. Like, zero warning. I had to slam my brakes to avoid getting fully plowed.

Here's the thing — his rear bumper still caught the front corner of my car when he cut over. I felt the impact, he HAD to have felt it too. And what does he do? Just... keeps driving. Didn't slow down, didn't pull over, nothing. I was honestly in shock for a few seconds before I even thought to grab my phone.

I did have my dashcam running and you can see him drift over the lane line into my space. There was a huge gap behind me where he could've just slotted in safely — he just didn't want to wait. In the footage you can also kind of make out that his rear bumper already had some pretty serious scraping on it, so I doubt this is the first time he's pulled something like this.

I called the non-emergency police line when I got home and they said since I wasn't physically at the scene anymore there wasn't much they could do. I filed an online report but it feels pretty useless.

My insurance company is already asking me questions and I'm getting a little nervous. Like, I was rear-ended by a guy changing lanes — how is that somehow my problem? Has anyone dealt with something like this? Am I actually exposed to any fault here?

15replies

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15 replies

  • 21
    patient-elk-419

    Be really careful about how much you volunteer to your own insurance adjuster. They're going to ask you open-ended questions and anything you say can get twisted into partial fault on your end. Stick to the facts, reference your dashcam footage every single time, and don't speculate or apologize for anything. Adjusters are trained to find any hook to reduce their payout — even on clear-cut cases like yours.

    • 1
      grounded-late-shift277

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 19
    sharp-elk-477

    Honestly, from what you're describing, this reads as a pretty straightforward lane-change fault situation. When I was on the other side of this, if someone had dashcam showing the other driver crossing the lane line and initiating contact, that was usually enough to push fault onto the other party — or at minimum keep it off the person who got hit. The hit-and-run complicates it a little, but the footage is your best friend here. Also make sure the online police report number is attached to everything you send your insurer.

    • 10
      honest-traveler180

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

  • 19
    clever-wren-100

    A couple of practical things: First, get a copy of that online police report confirmation and keep it with your claim file. Second, if there are any businesses or highway cameras near where this happened, it might be worth asking your insurance company (or an attorney if you end up getting one) to request that footage before it gets overwritten — that stuff usually only gets kept for 30 days or less. Third, document any damage with timestamped photos today if you haven't already. The more evidence you stack up early, the better.

  • 17
    plain-dove-452

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking: a driver who changes lanes is responsible for doing so safely and yielding to traffic already in that lane. If your dashcam shows him crossing the line and making contact, that's a meaningful piece of evidence in your favor. A hit-and-run adds a wrinkle — depending on your state, your own uninsured motorist coverage might come into play. Might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options before you commit to anything with your insurer.

    • 6
      restless-co-pilot452

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 16
    candid-owl-510

    Beyond the insurance stuff — did you feel any soreness in your neck or back after the impact? Even a low-speed clip can cause soft tissue stuff that doesn't show up until a day or two later. If anything feels off, please go get checked out and make sure it's documented medically. I've seen people brush off symptoms and then have a much harder time connecting them to the accident later.

    • 4
      plainspoken-offramp594

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 15
    genuine-crane-594

    Ugh, this is so stressful and I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that he just drove away is infuriating. I really hope your dashcam footage is clear enough to make this a non-issue. Thinking of you — don't let them bully you into accepting fault for something that clearly wasn't your doing.

    • 6
      quiet-commuter599

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

  • 14
    gentle-tern-154

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me last spring. Guy merged hard into my lane on the bypass, clipped my front end, and disappeared into traffic. My heart was pounding for like 20 minutes after. The dashcam footage was honestly the only thing that saved me — without it I'm not sure my insurance would've taken my side so quickly. Hang onto that video and back it up in multiple places RIGHT NOW if you haven't already.

    • 16
      curious-heron-496

      Short answer: no, you're almost certainly not at fault. He changed lanes into you. That's on him. Your job right now is to (1) protect that dashcam footage, (2) file everything in writing with your insurer, and (3) stop answering questions verbally if you can help it — email creates a paper trail. Don't overthink it, just document everything.

    • 21
      bold-swift-860

      I'm not doubting you, but a couple of questions: How clearly does the footage actually show the lane line being crossed? Like is it obvious, or is it borderline? And how fast were both of you going at the time? I've seen cases where someone thinks they have solid dashcam proof and then the video quality or angle makes it more ambiguous than expected. Just want to make sure you're going in with realistic expectations.

    • 10
      steady-wanderer176

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.