The Shoulder
The Shoulder
51
hearty-swan-286

Hit by a semi while merging — on a tourist visa, no liability coverage. Am I just... cooked?

I don't even know where to start. I'm here on a student visa finishing up a semester and rented a car to drive to see some friends a few states over. On the highway, I was merging from an on-ramp and a semi came up fast in the right lane. There was contact — the truck clipped my rear quarter panel and I spun into the shoulder. Thankfully nobody was seriously hurt.

The highway patrol showed up, took statements, and I ended up getting cited for failure to yield during a merge. The truck driver is an independent operator — not a big fleet company, just a guy who owns his rig and takes contract hauls. He's already texted me twice about his repair costs.

Here's the problem: I bought a third-party coverage plan before the trip that covers damage to the rental itself, but I just realized it has zero liability protection for damage to the other vehicle. I declined the rental company's own coverage package to save money (huge mistake, I know). And I have no personal auto policy — I don't own a car back home.

I'm genuinely confused about fault here. Yes, I was merging. But he came up fast and I had already committed to the lane. Doesn't a professional truck driver have some responsibility to manage their speed near on-ramps? Is there any way fault could be shared?

I'm also a little scared about what this means for my visa status and whether a civil lawsuit could affect that. I've never dealt with anything like this in my life. Any advice from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 10
    daring-swan-513

    I was in almost this exact situation a couple years ago — merging accident, got cited, the other driver was blowing up my phone about repairs. What I learned is that a citation doesn't automatically mean you're 100% liable in a civil sense. Fault in an insurance or legal context can be split. Please don't just accept full blame because a cop gave you a ticket.

    • 18
      mellow-wren-865

      Be very careful if the truck driver's insurance company (or even his attorney) reaches out and asks you to give a recorded statement. That is a trap. They will use your own words to lock you into 100% fault. You are not legally required to do that. Say as little as possible until you've talked to someone who actually knows what they're doing.

    • 0
      kind-parent365

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

  • 10
    brave-owl-700

    Former claims adjuster here. Merging accidents are almost never clean 100/0 splits, even when one driver gets the ticket. Adjusters are trained to assign comparative fault, and a commercial driver traveling at an unsafe speed near a busy on-ramp absolutely can be tagged with partial responsibility. The fact that he's an independent owner-operator matters too — he may have a commercial auto policy that covers liability even if he told you he doesn't have 'personal' insurance. Those are two different things. Worth digging into.

    • 14
      warm-tern-827

      A few things worth knowing: most states use comparative negligence, which means fault can be divided as a percentage between both drivers. Even if you're found partially at fault, the other driver could still be assigned a share. Also, many PI attorneys offer free consultations and take cases on contingency — meaning no upfront cost to you. Given that you have potential exposure on the liability side AND a possible claim of your own for the accident, talking to one costs you nothing and could clarify a lot. The visa concern is real but a civil matter generally doesn't affect immigration status directly — though I'd mention it when you talk to an attorney just to be safe.

  • 13
    calm-vole-253

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the traffic citation and civil/insurance fault are separate determinations. Plenty of people get cited and still recover damages, or have fault shared. The fact that he's a commercial driver operating a large vehicle near active on-ramp traffic is genuinely relevant. Don't settle anything or sign anything without talking to a lawyer first. A free consult will at least tell you where you stand.

  • 5
    curious-badger-857

    You said nobody was 'seriously' hurt — please make sure you actually get checked out if you haven't already. Adrenaline after an accident can mask pain for 24-48 hours. Whiplash and soft tissue injuries don't always show up immediately. If anything starts hurting in the next few days, go to urgent care and make sure it gets documented and linked to the accident. That paper trail matters.

    • 21
      humble-grouse-906

      Three things you need to do right now: (1) stop texting the truck driver back, (2) gather every piece of evidence you have — photos, dashcam if you had one, the police report number, anything, and (3) talk to a personal injury attorney before anything else happens. You may have more options than you think, and you may also have exposure you need to understand. Either way, you need the full picture before you make any moves.

  • 17
    clear-stoat-979

    I can only imagine how stressed you must be, especially being far from home and not knowing how any of this works. Please don't try to handle the truck driver on your own via text. Stop responding to him directly. You need someone in your corner before this goes any further.

    • 2
      hopeful-survivor871

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

  • 10
    keen-marten-629

    Genuine question — what does the third-party coverage document actually say? Sometimes people assume there's no liability coverage when it's buried in the policy or the rental company's terms. Worth re-reading the full policy PDF word by word before you assume the worst. Also, did the rental company say anything about their own liability protections that might apply automatically when you rent?