The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
clever-otter-087

Hit a mattress on the freeway — no way to dodge it. Am I on the hook for this?

Still kind of shaking my head at this whole situation. I was doing highway speed last Tuesday, middle lane, when the SUV ahead of me suddenly jerked left. Before I could even process what was happening, I realized there was a mattress flopped across my lane. Car to my right, concrete barrier to my left — I had nowhere to go. I ran straight over it.

Drove the rest of the way home fine, or so I thought. Next morning I noticed my car was pulling weird and there was a grinding noise at higher speeds. Turns out the mattress got sucked under and messed up a wheel well liner, bent a tie rod, and did something funky to my exhaust heat shield. Shop gave me an estimate that made me want to lie down on that mattress and give up.

I called my insurance to ask about filing a claim and the person I spoke with made it sound like because the debris wasn't attached to another vehicle, it might be classified differently — like I should have avoided it? I was on a crowded freeway going 70mph with zero room to maneuver. How is that on me?

I have collision coverage but obviously I don't want my rates to spike over something I had zero control over. Has anyone dealt with road debris claims before? Did your rates actually go up? Should I even bother filing or just eat the cost? I feel like I'm being punished for not having the reflexes of a fighter pilot.

9replies

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9 replies

  • 18
    clever-crow-573

    Oh man, I went through almost exactly this two years ago — chunk of retread tire from a semi destroyed my front bumper and cracked my radiator mount. My insurer tried the same 'avoidable' framing with me. I pushed back hard and asked them to show me in writing where that standard was defined in my policy. They couldn't, and the claim went through. Don't just accept what the first rep tells you over the phone.

  • 16
    mellow-marten-719

    Former claims adjuster here. The 'avoidable debris' thing gets thrown around loosely by phone reps, but it's rarely a formal policy term — it's more of an internal guideline some carriers use when deciding how to code the loss. A mattress on a crowded freeway with no escape path is about as unavoidable as it gets. If you have photos of the scene, your repair estimate, and a consistent account of what happened, a good adjuster should code this as a not-at-fault collision or even a comprehensive loss in some states. The surcharge risk is real but not guaranteed — ask specifically whether this type of claim triggers a rate review under your policy.

  • 9
    genuine-raven-979

    Please don't take what that first rep said as gospel. They are not your advocate. Get everything in writing, document every conversation with a date and the rep's name, and if they try to hit you with a surcharge, appeal it. Insurance companies count on people just accepting the first answer.

  • 9
    sharp-tern-047

    A few things worth knowing: some states actually have funds or DOT reporting processes for road hazard damage — it's worth filing a report with your state highway department regardless of what you do with insurance, just to create a paper trail. Also, if anyone saw the mattress and can confirm there was no safe way around it, even a note from them could help if you need to dispute a fault determination later.

  • 12
    gentle-crane-749

    I know you're focused on the car, which makes sense, but please also check in with yourself physically. Adrenaline from a sudden impact like that can mask soreness and stiffness for 48-72 hours. If your neck or back starts bothering you in the next few days, see a doctor and get it documented — don't just tough it out.

  • 6
    mellow-marmot-041

    File the claim. Get the car fixed. If your rates go up, shop around — one incident rarely locks you in forever. Paying out of pocket on a tie rod job to avoid a hypothetical rate increase is almost never the math that works out in your favor.

    • 3
      weary-survivor405

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

  • 15
    cool-kestrel-981

    Quick question — did you actually stop and take any photos at the scene, or call highway patrol to report it? I'm not doubting you, but having a police or DOT report showing the debris was confirmed on the road is going to make this a lot cleaner than just your word against the adjuster's assumptions.

  • 12
    candid-marten-748

    Honestly the fact that you kept control of the car and didn't swerve into another lane or the barrier is huge. It could have been so much worse. A repair bill is stressful but you walked away, and that matters. Hope it gets sorted quickly for you.