The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsbright-kestrel-855

Hit and run got me — is filing a UMPD claim actually worth it for minor damage?

So this happened two days ago and I'm still kind of rattled. I was sitting at a red light when someone clipped the back corner of my car and just... kept going. No stopping, no hazards, nothing. Gone.

The damage looks like paint transfer, a couple decent scratches, and what I think might be a small crack starting in the bumper fascia. Not catastrophic, but not nothing either.

I filed a police report the same day — the officer didn't seem super hopeful they'd find the person, honestly. I have uninsured motorist property damage coverage so technically I can file a claim. My deductible is pretty low.

Here's my dilemma: I've built up a solid accident-free discount over several years and I'm paranoid about losing it. I know this wasn't my fault at all, but I've heard stories about premiums creeping up even on not-at-fault claims depending on the state and carrier. I genuinely don't know if the math works out in my favor.

Has anyone been in a similar situation? Did filing a UMPD claim for cosmetic-ish damage end up hurting your rates? Or did your insurer treat it as truly no-fault and leave your discounts alone?

I feel like I'm going in circles trying to figure out what the "right" move is here. Any experience or insight would be really helpful — even just knowing what questions to ask my insurer before I officially pull the trigger on the claim.

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12 replies

  • 18
    steady-fox-844

    Quick question — did you get any dashcam footage? Even a partial plate or vehicle description could change things. If there's any chance the driver gets identified, you'd potentially be dealing with their liability coverage instead of your own UMPD, which sidesteps the whole discount question entirely.

  • 18
    candid-kestrel-398

    I know this is stressful, but honestly — you did everything right. Filed the report immediately, you have coverage for exactly this situation, and you're asking smart questions before just blindly filing. A lot of people panic and either file without thinking or do nothing at all. You're already ahead of the curve.

  • 16
    careful-seal-445

    Get the repair estimate first. If the damage comes to, say, only a couple hundred bucks over your deductible, just pay out of pocket and protect your discount history. If it's a real chunk of money, file the claim — that's what the coverage is for. Don't make this decision blind without knowing the actual repair number.

    • 2
      careful-wanderer514

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

  • 15
    brave-bison-020

    Former auto claims adjuster here. A few things worth knowing from the inside:

    1. UMPD claims are typically logged on your CLUE report regardless of fault. Future insurers can see them when you shop rates. 2. Whether YOUR current carrier dings your discount depends entirely on their internal policy and your state's regulations — there's real variation. 3. The low deductible is tempting, but if the repair estimate only runs a few hundred over your deductible, the math might not justify the claim history entry.

    Get a repair estimate first before you file anything. That number will make the decision a lot clearer.

    • 16
      steady-marmot-158

      The police report you already filed is really important — hang onto that case number. If the hit-and-run driver is ever identified later, that documentation establishes the timeline. Also, some states require a police report specifically to access UMPD coverage for hit-and-runs, so you've already done the right thing there.

    • 5
      honest-commuter396

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

    • 3
      restless-sidewalk736

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 13
    bold-vole-162

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me last spring — someone sideswiped me in a parking lot and vanished. I agonized over the same question for like a week. Eventually I called my insurer and just asked them directly: 'Will filing a UMPD claim affect my safe driver discount?' The answer actually surprised me — they told me not-at-fault claims flagged as hit-and-run don't count against your tier in my state. Might be worth making that call before you decide anything. The answer could make your decision a lot easier.

    • 9
      plain-hare-296

      Be really careful here. Insurers will sometimes tell you on the phone that a claim 'won't affect your rate' and then at renewal you notice a bump that's hard to trace back to anything specific. Ask them to put in writing — or at least get a claim number and the rep's name — exactly how this type of claim is categorized. Not trying to scare you, just... these companies have a lot of ways to quietly adjust things.

  • 8
    bright-vole-370

    I know your question is about the claim and the money stuff, but — are you physically okay? Sometimes the adrenaline from something like this masks soreness that shows up a day or two later, especially in the neck and shoulders. Don't brush off any stiffness you feel this week. Get it checked if anything feels off.

    • 3
      kind-survivor774

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