The Shoulder
The Shoulder
71
Car accidentsgenuine-tern-567

Guy rear-ended me in a parking lot, promised to pay out of pocket, now won't answer my calls

I feel like such an idiot writing this but here goes.

About two months ago I was parked at my gym, just sitting in my car scrolling my phone before heading in. Felt a bump — turns out the guy behind me misjudged backing out of his spot and hit my rear bumper pretty good. He got out, looked at the damage with me, and was super calm about it. Said he'd rather just handle it between us so neither of our insurance rates go up. Seemed totally reasonable at the time.

We exchanged numbers right there in the lot. He texted me the same day to check in, which made me feel like he was serious. We even met up at a body shop together and got an estimate. He said he needed a few weeks to pull the money together — something about waiting on a paycheck. I said fine, no rush, I'm not heartless.

Fast forward to now: complete radio silence. Calls go to voicemail. Texts show delivered but never read. Last message I sent was two weeks ago.

Here's what I do have:

  • His full name (he texted it to me at the time)
  • His phone number
  • Photo of his plate I took right after it happened
  • Description and color of his vehicle
  • The original text thread where he acknowledges hitting me and mentions the estimate
  • Photos of the damage I took same day
  • The body shop estimate, printed and saved

I haven't contacted my insurance yet because I was honestly afraid of my rate going up. I know, I know. But before I panic — what are my actual options here? Small claims? Go through my insurance now even though it's been a while? I just want my bumper fixed, I'm not trying to ruin anyone's life.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 9
    silent-fox-180

    This happened to me almost exactly — private parking lot, guy swore he'd pay, disappeared after three weeks. What finally worked for me was filing in small claims court. The process was way less intimidating than I expected, and honestly just getting the court notice sent to him made him respond immediately. You already have the texts where he admits fault, which is huge. That evidence is basically your whole case right there.

    • 8
      patient-neighbor861

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 18
    daring-hare-364

    Before you do anything else — call your own insurance and at least ask hypothetically how late reporting affects your claim. Some policies have windows. I'd want to know what I'm working with before that door closes completely, because if small claims doesn't pan out you want a backup.

    • 11
      spry-badger-225

      So from the inside, here's what I'd tell you: late reporting is a yellow flag but not automatically a denial. The key thing adjusters look at is whether you had a legitimate reason for the delay — and 'the other party verbally agreed to pay out of pocket' is actually a pretty recognized reason. Document that timeline clearly. Write it down now while it's fresh. If you do file with your insurance, that narrative matters.

      Also, your text thread is gold. I've seen claims decided on way less.

  • 19
    tidy-raven-015

    Small claims is honestly built for exactly this situation. You don't need a lawyer, the filing fees are low, and the evidence threshold isn't like a full civil trial. The text messages where he acknowledges the incident and discusses the estimate basically establish liability and damages in one shot. Just make sure the claim amount you file for matches your written estimate. Bring printed copies of everything.

    • 9
      daring-heron-510

      Random question — were you okay after the impact? Even a parking lot bump can jar you more than you realize in the moment. Just want to make sure you're not so focused on the car damage that you've brushed off any neck or back stiffness. Sometimes that stuff shows up days later.

    • 10
      curious-neighbor311

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 12
    careful-mole-788

    Stop waiting. File in small claims this week. You have his name, his number, and written admission over text. That's more than most people walk in with. The longer you sit on this the more it feels unresolvable — it's not, you just have to take the first step.

  • 13
    spry-hare-400

    Not legal advice, but what you're describing is a pretty clean civil matter — you have documented admission of fault, a professional estimate, and a paper trail of his promises to pay. Small claims is likely your most efficient path. One thing worth knowing: in most states you can also pursue him for court filing costs if you win, which adds a little extra incentive for him to settle before it ever gets to a hearing. Talk to an actual attorney if you want specifics for your state.

    • 1
      calm-passenger748

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 20
    clear-crow-297

    Ugh, I'm so sorry. You were being kind and flexible and he just took advantage of that. You did nothing wrong by trusting someone who was acting trustworthy. Please don't beat yourself up — just focus on what you can do now, and it sounds like you actually have a lot of options.

  • 17
    warm-bison-986

    Quick clarifying question — was this in a private lot or a public street? That can affect whether a police report could've been filed (or still can be, in some places). Also, is the damage purely cosmetic or did it affect anything functional? Just trying to understand the full picture before assuming small claims is the obvious move.

    • 3
      grounded-late-shift717

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

    • 5
      kind-survivor753

      How long did it end up taking in your case?