The Shoulder
The Shoulder
51
Insurancebold-crow-702

Hit by an uninsured driver with no license — what do I do now?

Still kind of in shock writing this. Got rear-ended two days ago at a red light — wasn't even moving. The guy who hit me pulls over, and when we start exchanging info I realize pretty quickly something is off. No insurance card, couldn't produce a valid license either. I called the police and they came out and filed a report, so at least that's documented.

Here's my situation: I only carry liability on my car. I didn't add uninsured motorist coverage because honestly I was trying to keep my premium down. Now I'm sitting here with a busted rear bumper, possible alignment issues, and a neck that's been stiff and sore since it happened.

I have the other driver's name and phone number but I seriously doubt I'd ever collect anything from them personally — they couldn't even prove they were supposed to be driving.

Questions I keep going back to:

  • Is there ANY path through my own insurance given I don't have UM coverage?
  • Can I go after the other driver directly in small claims or civil court, and is that even worth the hassle?
  • Should I be seeing a doctor even if the pain feels manageable right now? (It's not terrible but it's not gone either)
  • Does the police report actually help me here or is it mostly just paperwork?

I'm not in a financial position to just eat the repair costs. Any advice from people who've been in a similar mess would really help right now. I feel completely stuck.

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9 replies

  • 16
    genuine-crow-247

    Ugh, I went through almost the exact same thing about a year ago. The other driver had a suspended license and zero insurance. Honestly the hardest part was accepting that even if you "win" against someone like that in court, collecting is a whole other nightmare. What saved me was that I actually did have UM coverage and didn't realize it — so definitely dig through your policy documents carefully before assuming you don't. Sometimes it's bundled in without you remembering you added it.

    • 15
      genuine-hare-264

      Please go get checked out by a doctor, even if the neck stiffness feels minor. Whiplash symptoms can seriously lag — I've seen patients feel okay-ish for 3 or 4 days and then wake up barely able to turn their head. Beyond your actual health, having that medical visit on record matters a lot if you end up pursuing any kind of claim. Don't wait until it gets worse to create that paper trail.

  • 15
    brave-mole-298

    Be really careful how you talk to your own insurance company right now. Even when you're the victim, adjusters are trained to look for any reason to limit what they owe you. If there's any gray area in your policy language around uninsured drivers, they may try to use it. Document everything before you make that call — photos, the police report number, your medical visit, all of it.

  • 14
    genuine-badger-052

    Not legal advice, but a few things worth knowing: in most states, if the at-fault driver is uninsured, you can pursue them personally through civil court. Whether that's practical is a different question — judgment-proof people are common in these situations. One angle worth exploring is whether anyone else shares liability (like if the car was borrowed from someone who does have insurance). A free consult with a PI attorney costs you nothing and could surface options you haven't thought of.

  • 12
    calm-wren-530

    Worked in auto claims for several years so let me give you the real picture. Without UM/UIM coverage, your own policy almost certainly won't cover your vehicle damage — liability-only means your insurer covers damage YOU cause to others, not damage caused to you. That said, call and ask anyway. Explain the situation clearly. Sometimes there are endorsements or exceptions people forget they have.

    As for suing the other driver directly — it's possible, but if someone is driving around uninsured with no valid license, the odds they have collectible assets are pretty low. It might be worth a free consultation with a PI attorney just to understand your options before spending time on small claims.

    • 13
      candid-tern-370

      Three things you need to do right now, in order: see a doctor today or tomorrow, get a copy of that police report, and read your actual policy documents front to back. Don't rely on memory for what coverage you have. After those three things are done, then figure out your next move. Trying to strategize before you have that info is just spinning your wheels.

  • 10
    bold-stoat-227

    I'm so sorry this happened to you — you did everything right and you're still the one dealing with the mess. That is so unfair. Please don't let the stress of the money stuff stop you from taking care of your neck first. Everything else can be figured out but your health comes first. Rooting for you.

  • 9
    kind-seal-095

    The police report is genuinely useful — it's not just paperwork. It establishes the other driver's lack of insurance and license on record, which matters both for any legal action and for your own insurer. Make sure you get the actual report number and request a copy as soon as it's available, not just the incident number they give you at the scene. Some departments let you pull it online within a few days.

    • 9
      kind-wanderer673

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