The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancewise-swan-807

Hit by an uninsured driver with only a permit — police wouldn't even come out. What now?

Still kind of shaking as I write this. Got into my first ever accident this evening on my way home from work. A car drifted into my lane on a two-lane road and clipped my front quarter panel pretty hard before I could react. No warning, no signal, nothing.

I pulled over and so did the other driver. I grabbed his license, registration, and insurance card like I'd always heard you're supposed to do. Called the non-emergency police line and they basically told me that since nobody was bleeding and the cars were still drivable, an officer wasn't going to come out — I'd have to file a report through their online portal. Felt really wrong to just drive away from the scene like that, but I didn't have much choice.

Here's the part that's really stressing me out: when I got home and looked at the photos I took, I noticed his license is a provisional/learner's permit, not a full license. And his insurance card? Expired by several months. I had no idea when I was standing there — it all happened so fast.

My own policy has uninsured motorist coverage but I honestly don't know how that works or if it'll fully cover the damage and a potential injury claim. My neck is already starting to feel stiff and I'm worried about that too.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Do I just go through my own insurance? Is there any point in trying to go after the other driver directly? And should I get checked out medically even if I'm not sure I'm actually hurt?

Any advice from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 8
    keen-finch-022

    Ugh, I went through almost this exact situation a couple of years ago. Uninsured driver, no officer at the scene, the whole mess. First thing I'd say: go get checked out medically, today or first thing tomorrow. I brushed off the stiffness in my neck thinking it was just stress, and it turned into a weeks-long ordeal. Doctors need to document it early or it gets complicated later. Also file that online police report ASAP — the timestamp matters more than people think.

    • 6
      tired-optimist301

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

  • 8
    candid-seal-207

    Be really careful when you call your own insurance company. Even though you're the victim here, adjusters are trained to look for any reason to limit what they pay out under your uninsured motorist coverage. Don't volunteer extra info beyond the facts, don't speculate about fault, and definitely don't say you're 'probably fine' if your neck is already sore. Everything you say gets noted.

  • 14
    daring-kestrel-406

    I used to work claims for a major carrier — here's what happens on the inside when you file an uninsured motorist claim: they will look for gaps. Did you document the scene? Do you have photos of both cars, the road, his expired card? The more evidence you have, the harder it is for them to low-ball or dispute the claim. Also, the fact that he was on a learner's permit may mean a supervising adult could share liability — that's worth exploring.

    • 10
      bold-wren-479

      A few practical steps that will help you down the road:

      1. File the online police report right away and save the confirmation number. 2. Notify your insurance company that you were in an accident — most policies require prompt notice even when it's not your fault. 3. Keep a simple log of how you're feeling physically each day, what you can't do, any appointments. This documentation is gold if a claim or lawsuit ever moves forward. 4. Don't accept any settlement from your insurer until you know the full extent of your injuries.

      The learner's permit angle is interesting — depending on your state, whoever was supposed to be supervising that driver might carry liability too.

  • 14
    silent-elk-370

    Please don't wait on the neck stiffness. Soft tissue injuries from collisions can feel minor at first because your adrenaline is still high, then they flare up 24-48 hours later. Go to urgent care or your doctor, describe exactly what happened, and let them examine you. It's not about being dramatic — it's about having a medical record that accurately reflects what you experienced.

    • 4
      soft-spoken-mile-marker982

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 8
    genuine-lynx-857

    Not legal advice, but this situation — uninsured driver, possible permit violation, physical symptoms starting — is exactly when talking to a personal injury attorney makes sense, and most offer free consultations. Your uninsured motorist coverage exists for this, but having someone in your corner who understands how to maximize that claim is genuinely useful. Don't sign or agree to anything with your insurer before at least one conversation with an attorney.

    • 8
      keen-stoat-695

      Three things, in order: doctor, police report, attorney consult. Do all three before the week is out. Everything else is secondary.

    • 0
      patient-walker985

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

  • 18
    candid-finch-898

    I'm so sorry this happened to you, especially as your first accident. It's completely overwhelming and it makes sense that you're still shaking. Just take it one step at a time — you don't have to figure everything out tonight. The stiffness in your neck worries me though, please get that looked at. Take care of yourself first.

  • 14
    bold-tern-763

    Quick question — did you get a photo of the actual expiration date on the insurance card, or just the card itself? And do you know for sure it was a learner's permit vs. just an unusual-looking license from another state? Not doubting you, just making sure you have solid documentation before you go further because that distinction could matter a lot when you're making your case.

    • 3
      weary-driver806

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.