The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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genuine-raven-409

Hit-and-run at a stoplight with my nephew in the car — insurer's offer feels insulting

Still kind of shaking as I write this, even though it happened a few weeks ago now.

I was completely stopped at a red light with my teenage nephew in the passenger seat when someone plowed into the back of us out of nowhere. No warning, no horn, nothing. By the time I processed what happened, the other car had already taken off through the intersection. Never got a plate number — it all happened so fast.

I filed a claim through my own uninsured motorist coverage since the driver was never found. My adjuster has been... fine, I guess? But the property damage number they came back with feels way too low for what I'm looking at. My trunk area is visibly crumpled, the hatch doesn't close right anymore, and there's this low grinding noise when I accelerate that definitely wasn't there before. Their estimate basically covers cosmetic stuff and calls it a day.

Medically it's been a whole thing too. I've had neck stiffness and headaches since the crash — went to urgent care the next morning and they flagged possible soft tissue damage. My nephew seemed okay at first but he's been having trouble sleeping and gets anxious whenever we're stopped at lights now. That part honestly breaks my heart more than the car stuff.

I do have an attorney helping with the injury side, but I'm curious what people here have experienced with the property damage piece specifically. Did anyone push back on a low vehicle estimate and actually get more? And how do you even document something like "the car doesn't feel right" in a way the insurance company takes seriously?

Also — does anyone know if the psychological stuff my nephew is going through can be part of a claim even if he doesn't have a physical diagnosis?

Any shared experiences would genuinely help right now. This whole thing has me feeling like we're being penalized for someone else's hit-and-run.

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12 replies

  • 10
    spry-newt-833

    That "low grinding noise" is exactly the kind of thing adjusters love to ignore on the first pass because it requires a mechanical inspection, not just a visual one. Push hard for a full mechanical evaluation, not just a body shop look. Get it in writing that you're requesting it. They will absolutely lowball you if you let them frame this as only cosmetic damage.

    • 22
      swift-bison-286

      Not legal advice, but worth knowing: uninsured motorist claims have specific rules that vary by state, and some states cap how much you can recover or require certain steps before you can access UM benefits. The property damage and the bodily injury portions are often handled as separate claims with separate limits. Since you already have an attorney, ask them specifically about both the UM property damage process AND whether diminished value is recoverable in your state. Those are two questions worth asking directly.

  • 17
    swift-vole-666

    Former adjuster here. The initial estimate on property damage is almost always based on what's visible — adjusters are often working from photos or a quick walk-around, and they're not mechanics. If there's a noise or a handling issue, that needs a separate mechanical inspection, and you're entitled to request one. Also, "diminished value" is a real thing — even after repairs, your car is worth less because it has an accident on its history. A lot of people don't know to ask for that separately, and insurers definitely don't volunteer it.

    • 11
      bright-seal-002

      On your nephew's anxiety — yes, psychological and emotional impacts can absolutely be part of a personal injury claim, even without a broken bone or ER visit. It's often documented through therapy records, a written statement from him or his parents, and sometimes a report from a mental health provider. Since you already have an attorney on the injury side, make sure they know about his symptoms in detail. That stuff matters and it's often undercounted.

    • 16
      quick-heron-286

      Please don't brush off the neck stiffness and headaches. Soft tissue injuries from rear-end crashes can take weeks to fully show up, and people sometimes feel worse at the two or three week mark than they did right after. If your symptoms haven't improved or are getting worse, go back and get re-evaluated — don't wait. That documentation trail matters both for your health and for your claim.

  • 19
    quick-tern-838

    I can't imagine how scary that must have been, especially with your nephew right there. The fact that you're holding it together enough to research all of this says a lot. Please make sure you're taking care of yourself too — not just the paperwork side of things.

    • 8
      quiet-traveler852

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 6
    bold-stoat-632

    Three things: get your own independent body shop estimate today, ask specifically about diminished value as a separate line item, and make sure every symptom — yours and your nephew's — is documented by a medical provider now, not later. Insurance companies don't reward people who wait and hope things improve on their own.

    • 8
      calm-traveler896

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

  • 5
    cool-badger-699

    Quick question — when you say the offer feels low, are you comparing it to an independent estimate or just going off a gut feeling? I'm not doubting you, the grinding noise alone suggests there's more going on than they priced in. But if you can get a written estimate from a shop you chose yourself, you'll have something concrete to argue against instead of just their number.

    • 2
      restless-overpass565

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 16
    clear-wolf-815

    I went through almost the exact same thing — uninsured motorist claim after a hit-and-run, and the first property damage offer was a joke. What helped me was getting my own independent estimate from a body shop I trusted (not one the insurer recommended). The difference between their number and the shop's number was significant, and I used that in writing to push back. It took a few rounds but they did come up in the end. Don't just accept the first number.