The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
gentle-beaver-654

Hit while parked — should I file a claim or just eat the repair cost myself?

So this happened last week and I'm still kind of annoyed about it. Came out of a grocery store to find my car had a pretty nasty dent and scraped-up bumper. No note, no nothing. Luckily a guy nearby saw it happen and snapped a photo of the other car on his phone, but we couldn't track down the driver and the lot doesn't have cameras. Filed a police report but the officer basically told me not to hold my breath.

Got an estimate from a body shop I trust — it's not cheap, but it's not catastrophic either. My deductible is $750 and I do have savings that could cover the gap. The car is only about 14 months old so I really don't want to just leave it looking like that.

Here's my dilemma: I've been with my current insurer for almost six years, zero claims, zero tickets. I'm genuinely worried that filing even a not-at-fault claim is going to spike my premium and wipe out whatever "savings" I think I'm getting from using insurance. My monthly rate right now is pretty reasonable and I'd hate to blow that up.

Has anyone actually run the numbers on this? Or talked to their insurer before deciding? I feel like I'm going in circles. Would love to hear from people who've been in a similar spot — did you file, did you pay out of pocket, and do you regret your choice either way?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 11
    bold-heron-250

    Almost identical thing happened to me in a parking garage. I decided to call my insurer before actually filing — just asked hypothetically what a claim like mine might do to my rates. They were surprisingly upfront about it. Ended up paying out of pocket because the math just didn't work in my favor. No regrets, honestly.

    • 16
      tidy-wren-690

      Don't assume "not-at-fault" protects you from a rate increase. A lot of carriers will still ding you just for the activity on your policy, especially if you're in a state that allows it. Read the fine print or call and ask them to put it in writing before you decide anything.

    • 1
      plainspoken-backseat466

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 11
    spry-marten-621

    Former claims adjuster here. This is honestly one of the most common questions and the answer really depends on your specific carrier and state regulations. Some companies have a first-claim forgiveness built in after a certain number of clean years — which you might qualify for. Others absolutely will raise your rates even on a not-at-fault parking lot claim. I'd call the 1-800 number and ask directly: "Will this affect my renewal premium?" Get a name and note the time of the call.

  • 9
    keen-badger-775

    Do the math. Take your deductible, subtract it from the repair estimate, and then figure out how many months of potential premium increases would eat that difference. If your rate goes up even $20/month, that's $240 a year — in three years you've lost more than you saved. Numbers don't lie.

    • 18
      patient-dove-693

      One thing people overlook: if you pay out of pocket now and then discover later there's hidden damage (like frame issues that don't show up right away), you've already closed the door on a claim. Not saying that's likely, but it's worth having the shop do a thorough inspection before you make the call. Some damage isn't obvious until they start pulling panels.

  • 14
    sharp-mole-138

    Not a car person at all, but I deal with people after accidents all the time. The stress of an unresolved situation — even just a dented bumper — lingers more than people expect. Whatever decision gets this off your plate faster is probably worth something too. Just my two cents.

    • 5
      grounded-overpass154

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

  • 15
    kind-otter-293

    How solid is that estimate, though? One shop's number, or did you get a second opinion? I've seen "straightforward" bumper jobs turn into much bigger repairs once they're actually in there. Might change your calculus if the real number ends up being significantly higher.

    • 2
      gentle-dreamer559

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

  • 17
    clear-crane-696

    Six years with no claims is actually a really strong position to be in. Some insurers have loyalty perks or claim forgiveness you might not even know about. Honestly worth a 10-minute phone call just to ask — you might be pleasantly surprised.