The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
curious-swan-156

Hit by someone driving a rental they weren't supposed to be in — now nobody will pay. Help?

So this happened about six weeks ago and I'm still completely lost on what to do.

I was stopped at a red light when a guy plowed into the back of my car. Pretty significant damage — my rear bumper is basically crumpled, there's frame concerns according to the body shop, and I've had neck stiffness ever since.

Here's where it gets complicated: he was driving one of those peer-to-peer rental cars (you know, where private owners rent out their personal vehicles). Turns out he was not the person who actually booked the rental. His sister booked it, and apparently those platforms only cover the listed driver. So the platform's insurance is declining the claim entirely because he wasn't authorized.

His sister is saying it's not her problem since she wasn't behind the wheel. The guy himself has minimal personal auto insurance and it sounds like it might not even be active — adjuster hinted at that without fully confirming.

My own policy is pretty bare-bones. I have liability and that's basically it, so my insurer isn't jumping in to help either.

I've filed a police report (thankfully I did that at the scene), I have photos of everything, and I got a written estimate from a shop.

  • Do I try to sue the driver directly in small claims?
  • Is the sister liable since she booked the rental under her name?
  • Is there any angle with the rental platform I'm missing?

I'm not made of money. The repair estimate is genuinely painful and I've already missed two days of work from the soreness and appointments. Just feel like I'm getting shuffled around and nobody wants to take responsibility.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 18
    kind-sparrow-777

    Ugh, this is almost exactly what happened to me two years ago — different platform, same runaround. What I learned the hard way is that these rental platforms have very specific language buried in their terms about who qualifies as a covered driver, and if that person deviated even slightly, they wash their hands of it fast. I ended up having to go after the actual driver personally. It was a whole thing, but it was the only path that actually moved.

  • 17
    clear-dove-379

    Not legal advice, but a couple of things worth knowing: the sister booking the rental under her name could create some exposure for her depending on your state — there's a legal concept around negligent entrustment, meaning if she knowingly let someone use the vehicle (or her reservation), she might share liability. Also, the driver's personal insurance potentially still applies even if the platform's doesn't. Worth having someone actually look at the full picture before you assume you're out of options.

  • 17
    swift-kestrel-116

    Don't trust the platform's insurance adjuster to tell you the full story. Their job is to find a reason not to pay, and 'unauthorized driver' is basically a gift to them. I'd push harder — get the denial in writing, get the specific policy language they're citing, and don't just take their word for it over the phone.

  • 8
    quiet-crow-675

    Former adjuster here. A few things: First, always get denials in writing — verbal denials on the phone don't mean much and sometimes the story changes. Second, peer-to-peer platforms often have what's called a 'contingent' coverage layer that only kicks in when other insurance is exhausted, but they won't volunteer that information. Third, yes, the driver's personal policy could still be in play even in this situation — his insurer needs to formally investigate before closing the door. Push them.

  • 17
    plain-tern-982

    The police report is huge — hang onto everything. You'll also want to send a formal demand letter to the driver before you file anything in small claims. Keep it simple: what happened, what you're owed, give a deadline. Sometimes people suddenly get cooperative when they realize you're serious. As for the sister, whether she has liability is genuinely a gray area, but a lawyer doing a free consult could tell you pretty quickly if that angle is worth pursuing in your state.

  • 22
    swift-finch-096

    Please don't ignore the neck stiffness. I know it feels minor compared to the car stuff, but soft tissue injuries from rear-end collisions can take weeks to fully show up and can turn into something chronic if you don't document and treat early. Go get evaluated, get it in writing, and keep a record of every symptom and appointment. If this ends up in any kind of claim or lawsuit, that documentation matters a lot.

    • 3
      curious-walker511

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

    • 4
      mellow-road-soul147

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 18
    candid-wren-508

    Honest take: small claims court is probably your most realistic move against the driver for the property damage, assuming the amount falls under your state's limit. It costs almost nothing to file, and even if he doesn't pay right away, a judgment follows him. The injury piece is a separate question and probably worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney — most won't charge you unless they recover something.

    • 10
      tired-optimist879

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 17
    clever-mole-449

    Quick question — did the adjuster actually confirm in writing that the driver's personal policy is inactive, or did they just imply it? Because that's a pretty significant detail. If his policy IS active, this whole situation changes. I'd get that confirmed before you go too far down any other path.

    • 8
      steady-parent130

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

  • 18
    cool-swift-086

    This sounds so exhausting on top of already dealing with the physical stuff. The fact that you kept all your documentation and filed a police report right away honestly puts you in a better position than a lot of people. I really hope you find a way through this — you didn't do anything wrong and you shouldn't be the one left holding the bag.