The Shoulder
The Shoulder
73
genuine-heron-571

Hit a parked car in a lot, left a note — did I handle this wrong?

So this happened two days ago and I'm still spiraling about it. I was pulling out of a parking spot at a strip mall and clipped the rear bumper of the car next to me. It was 100% my fault — I misjudged the angle. Nobody was around, no witnesses, no cameras that I could see.

I sat there for probably 15 minutes waiting to see if the owner would come out. When nobody showed, I wrote down my name and number on a receipt I had in my bag and tucked it under their windshield wiper. The damage looked minor — a scuff and a small dent — but I honestly don't know how these things add up repair-wise.

Here's where I'm second-guessing myself:

  • I didn't call the police or file a report. Is that going to come back and bite me?
  • I didn't photograph the other car's plate. I got a photo of the damage but that's it.
  • I haven't called my insurance yet because I'm terrified my rates are going to spike.

I'm 23 and this is my first accident ever. I know I should "do the right thing" and I feel like I did, but now I'm reading stuff online that's making me paranoid. Like what if the owner claims way more damage than actually happened? What if they say I never left a note and file a hit-and-run claim against me?

Do I just call my insurance proactively, or wait and see if the other person contacts me? I feel sick about the whole thing.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 20
    kind-badger-833

    I did almost the exact same thing last year — clipped someone in a grocery store lot, left a note, panicked for days. The owner called me, we exchanged info, and it ended up going through insurance without drama. Leaving the note was the right move. Most people appreciate that you didn't just drive off.

  • 19
    silent-sparrow-763

    Former claims adjuster here. Not filing a police report for a minor parking lot incident is extremely common — most jurisdictions don't even require it for low-speed property-damage-only situations. It won't automatically count against you. What DOES matter is that you report it to your own carrier promptly. Delayed reporting is one of the first things adjusters flag when they're looking for reasons to complicate a claim.

    • 3
      kind-dreamer641

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 17
    mellow-elk-770

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking: leaving the scene without any attempt to notify the other party is what creates legal exposure, not the absence of a police report in a minor property-damage situation. You made an effort. Document everything you remember while it's fresh and loop in your insurer sooner rather than later.

  • 17
    clear-marten-759

    No injuries here which is good, but please don't underestimate the stress response you're having. Two days of anxiety and "spiraling" (your word) is real. Be kind to yourself — adrenaline from even a minor accident can linger longer than people expect.

    • 8
      weathered-late-shift354

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

  • 15
    hearty-wren-241

    Quick question — do you actually have the photo you mentioned? Because "I got a photo of the damage" is doing a lot of work in your story. If that photo is clear and timestamped, that's your best protection against any inflated claims. If it's blurry or you're not sure it captures everything, go back to the lot and see if there are any cameras you might have missed.

    • 1
      patient-traveler296

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

  • 14
    quick-kestrel-531

    Call your insurance. Today. Don't wait for the other person to call you first. If they file a claim before you report it, you look like you were trying to hide it — even though you left a note. Proactive reporting almost always works in your favor with your own insurer.

    • 16
      daring-raven-761

      Honestly the fact that you stayed, waited, AND left a note says a lot about your character. Most people panic and just peel out. Try not to be so hard on yourself while you sort out the practical stuff.

    • 10
      hopeful-rider676

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

  • 14
    clever-bison-303

    The note you left actually demonstrates good faith, which matters. If the other party ever tried to allege hit-and-run, you'd have your own account of leaving contact info, plus the photo of the damage. Keep a written timeline — jot down exactly what time it happened, how long you waited, what you wrote on the note. Little details like that are surprisingly useful if anything gets disputed later.

    • 3
      grounded-backseat121

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 9
    keen-crow-501

    One thing nobody warns you about: if the other driver decides to get greedy, they can claim the damage was way worse than it was, or even deny a note existed. Take that photo of the damage you have and make sure it's timestamped. Back it up somewhere. If this escalates, that evidence matters more than you'd think.