The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancekeen-lynx-013

Hit-and-run dent, no police report filed — will my insurance still cover it?

So I walked out to my car after work last Tuesday and noticed a pretty significant crunch along the rear quarter panel. No note, no nothing. I have no idea if it happened in the parking garage at my office, the grocery store lot over the weekend, or somewhere else entirely — I genuinely didn't notice it until the light hit it just right.

At first I figured it was minor and I'd just let it go. But I took it to two body shops and both of them are saying the damage goes deeper than the surface — apparently there's frame or structural stuff involved and the repair estimate came back way higher than I expected.

So now I'm actually filing a claim with my own insurance. I have collision coverage and I think I have some kind of uninsured motorist property damage add-on, but I honestly never read the fine print.

Here's my problem: I never filed a police report. It's been almost 10 days since I first noticed the damage. A few questions I keep going back and forth on:

  • Is it too late to file a police report now, even though I don't know exactly when or where it happened?
  • Will my insurance company deny the claim or give me grief because there's no report?
  • Does the uninsured motorist property damage coverage even apply to a parked-car hit-and-run situation, or is that only for accidents where there's actual contact between moving vehicles?

I feel dumb for not reporting it immediately but I genuinely thought it was going to be a $400 fix. Any experience with this would be really helpful right now.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 14
    tidy-hare-649

    This happened to me in a mall parking lot about two years ago — came back to my car and the whole rear bumper was smashed in, zero note. I also waited before filing a police report and honestly the non-emergency line officer just took my statement over the phone. They gave me a report number same day. It felt weird reporting something when I had no suspect info, but the officer said they take these all the time. Definitely still try to file one even now — 10 days late is way better than never when your insurance asks for documentation.

    • 11
      hearty-hare-754

      Hey, the fact that you have collision coverage and potentially UMPD is already a better position than a lot of people find themselves in with parking lot hits. A lot of folks find out too late that they dropped those coverages to save money. You've got something to work with here — don't give up on the claim just because the paperwork isn't perfect.

    • 1
      weary-driver272

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 16
    quick-vole-691

    Watch out — adjusters love to use the missing police report as a reason to drag their feet or lowball you. Even if your policy doesn't require one, not having it gives them an opening to question whether the damage actually happened the way you say. Get that report filed TODAY, keep a copy of everything, and document any correspondence with your insurer in writing, not just phone calls.

    • 9
      mellow-kestrel-669

      Worked claims for several years and honestly, a late police report is way more common than people think. We saw it constantly with parking lot damage. Most policies don't have a hard deadline on the report itself — what matters more is that you reported the claim to us promptly. As long as you notified your carrier reasonably quickly after discovering the damage, the lack of an immediate police report is usually not a deal-breaker. That said, pull out your actual policy declarations page and look for the UMPD section — the language varies a lot between carriers and some do require a report as a condition of that specific coverage.

    • 10
      quiet-rider148

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 22
    keen-badger-944

    A few practical things worth knowing: most states allow you to file a police report after the fact for hit-and-run situations, especially when there's no known suspect. Call the non-emergency line and explain it was a parking lot incident you just discovered — they'll usually generate an incident report. Also, UMPD (uninsured motorist property damage) coverage rules differ by state, and some states actually exclude hit-and-runs where there was no physical contact between moving vehicles. Worth checking your state's specific rules on that. Not legal advice, just stuff I've seen come up a lot.

    • 3
      kind-commuter930

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 19
    keen-seal-079

    Not directly related to the insurance piece, but — if anyone was in the car when this impact happened and you just didn't realize the full force of it, soft tissue stuff can show up days or even weeks later. Just something to keep in mind if you or anyone else starts noticing any neck stiffness or headaches that seem to come out of nowhere.

  • 6
    warm-newt-632

    Three things: 1) File the police report right now, today, before you do anything else. 2) Get your policy out and actually read the UMPD section — call your agent if you can't find it. 3) Don't give your insurer a recorded statement without understanding what coverage you're making the claim under. Simple as that.

    • 0
      steady-wanderer730

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

  • 9
    mellow-tern-341

    I don't want to be harsh but I'm a little curious — you really had no idea this damage happened? Like, is this a large vehicle where the rear quarter is hard to see, or is it a small car? I ask because sometimes adjusters will probe pretty hard on the timeline question, trying to establish whether the damage could have been pre-existing. Just want to make sure you're ready to answer those questions clearly.