The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
quick-marmot-637

Hit-and-run got my car AND my roommate's — at-fault driver has bare-minimum coverage. Now what?

So this whole situation is still kind of wild to me and I'm trying to figure out my next steps.

Last week someone clipped my car while it was parked on the street in front of our place, and the impact pushed my car right into my roommate's truck that was parked directly behind me. The guy actually tried to take off but a couple of people hanging out nearby saw the whole thing and followed him until he pulled over about a street away. Thank goodness for nosy neighbors honestly.

Cops came, took a report, the whole thing. Here's where it gets complicated — when I finally got through to the at-fault driver's insurance, they told me his policy has a really low property damage liability limit. Like embarrassingly low. My car alone is probably going to cost more than that limit to repair or replace, and then you add my roommate's truck on top of it and we're looking at potentially way more than what his policy covers.

I don't fully understand how this works. Like, does my own insurance step in and chase the difference from the other guy's insurer? Or does my roommate have to file separately and we both just hope for the best? And is this the kind of situation where getting a lawyer actually makes a difference, or are they not super useful for property damage stuff?

We both have full coverage but I honestly don't know what that means in practice here. I feel like the insurance company is going to lowball us and I don't want to sign anything without understanding what I'm giving up.

Has anyone been through something like this? Really appreciate any insight.

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10 replies

  • 9
    plain-marten-303

    Ugh, I went through almost the exact same thing — my parked car got wrecked and the at-fault driver had the state minimum coverage which didn't come close to covering my loss. What I learned the hard way: your own insurance's uninsured/underinsured motorist property damage coverage (if you have it) is what bridges the gap. Check your declarations page specifically for that. It saved me from eating a huge chunk of the loss out of pocket.

  • 16
    candid-swift-723

    Please don't sign ANYTHING the other driver's insurance sends you without reading every word. They will send a quick settlement offer that sounds reasonable and it will have a release buried in it that closes out your claim forever. Once you sign, you cannot go back for more — even if the repair estimate comes in higher than expected. Take your time, get your own repair estimates from shops you choose, not ones they recommend.

  • 16
    brave-crow-922

    Former adjuster here. When the at-fault driver's policy limit is lower than the total damages across multiple vehicles, what typically happens is each claimant gets a piece of that limited pie — and the insurer will try to negotiate how it's split. Your roommate is a separate claimant, so they really should be filing their own claim independently, not relying on you to handle it for them. Also, the at-fault driver is personally liable for anything beyond his policy limit, but collecting from an individual is its own headache. Your underinsured coverage is honestly your best practical path here.

    • 7
      wise-grouse-675

      Here's what I'd do right now: (1) Get your own independent repair estimate before talking numbers with anyone. (2) Tell your roommate to call their insurance today — not tomorrow. (3) Read your policy for UIMPD coverage. (4) Don't accept the first offer. That's it. That's the list.

    • 7
      patient-commuter737

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 24
    quick-tern-250

    A few things worth knowing without getting too deep into the weeds: (1) Your roommate needs to open their own claim — their vehicle is their property and their loss, separate from yours. (2) 'Full coverage' usually means comp and collision, but underinsured motorist property damage is sometimes a separate add-on that not everyone has. Pull your actual policy documents and look for 'UMPD' or 'UIMPD.' (3) If the combined damage clearly exceeds the at-fault driver's limit, it's not a bad idea to at least have a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options — many handle property damage situations too.

    • 19
      silent-kestrel-170

      Not legal advice, but — property damage cases with a coverage shortfall are actually situations where an attorney can sometimes help, even if they're less common for PI lawyers. The key issues are: does the at-fault driver have personal assets worth pursuing, and do you or your roommate have UIMPD coverage to tap? An initial consult is usually free and would at least help you understand whether there's a viable path beyond just accepting the policy limit. Don't feel like you have to figure this out alone.

  • 9
    bold-heron-941

    This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that they tried to leave is infuriating. I really hope you and your roommate are able to get your cars sorted out without having to fight too hard. Please make sure you're documenting everything — every phone call, every email, every estimate. Screenshot it all.

    • 2
      thankful-sidewalk954

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 11
    hearty-fox-701

    Quick question — did the police report actually list the other driver as at-fault, or just document the incident? And do you know for certain what his coverage limit is, or did the adjuster just tell you that verbally? I'd want that in writing before assuming you know what you're actually working with.