The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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candid-beaver-140

Hit a wild animal on my commute — will filing comprehensive screw my rates?

Okay so I'm still kind of rattled and need some real-talk from people who've dealt with insurance stuff.

Background you probably don't need but feels relevant: I had a reckless driving charge about three years ago. It was a whole thing. I owned it, dealt with the consequences, and my rates have finally started coming back down to something close to human. Like legitimately just celebrated seeing a normal-looking premium for the first time in ages.

So tonight I'm doing my usual long haul between job sites — I basically live on this stretch of highway Tuesday through Thursday every week. Out of nowhere a large animal (pretty sure it was a black bear, I live in a rural-ish corridor) comes lumbering across the road and I clipped it going highway speed. The front end of my work truck took a hit — grille is cracked, hood has a crumple, one headlight housing is busted. The truck is still driveable but it's definitely not cosmetically fine.

I pulled over, called it in, got a police report, and took about 40 photos before the tow truck even showed up.

Here's my anxiety: Does filing a comprehensive claim actually ding your rates the same way a collision or at-fault claim does? I've heard mixed things. Part of me wants to just price out the repair out-of-pocket and avoid the whole thing, but the damage looks like it could run steep once a shop gets under the hood.

Anyone been through something like this with a complicated insurance history? I really don't want to watch my rates spike back into the stratosphere right when I finally clawed my way back down.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 22
    bright-lynx-640

    Okay so from my time on the inside — comprehensive claims (animal strikes, weather, theft, etc.) are coded differently than collision claims in most carriers' systems. Most insurers do NOT surcharge for a single comp claim, especially a first-party animal strike with a police report backing it up. The prior charge could make your overall risk profile look worse on renewal, but one comp claim alone is unlikely to be the trigger. That said, every carrier has its own underwriting rules, so call your agent before you file and ask directly: 'Will this comp claim affect my rates at renewal?' Get the answer in writing if you can. You have every right to ask that question before committing.

    • 10
      curious-optimist131

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 11
    careful-beaver-451

    I hit a deer two winters ago and had almost this exact panic. Filed comprehensive, rates didn't move at all. Comp claims are generally treated differently than collision because it's not a 'fault' event — you didn't cause the animal to be there. That said, I didn't have the prior driving history you're describing, so I'd want to hear from someone with more insurance knowledge on how that factors in.

    • 2
      soft-spoken-mile-marker322

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

    • 7
      hopeful-traveler740

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

  • 11
    warm-elk-029

    Hey — are you okay? Like physically? High-speed animal strikes can jolt you pretty hard even if you don't realize it in the moment. Adrenaline masks a lot. If your neck or back feel even a little off tomorrow morning, please get checked out. Don't just focus on the truck damage.

  • 9
    genuine-grouse-479

    Three years sober, rates coming back down, and you handled a scary roadside situation calmly with a police report and 40 photos? You're clearly in a very different headspace than you were back then. That counts for something, even if insurance math doesn't always reflect it.

  • 7
    gentle-bison-978

    The police report and photos you already have are exactly what you'd need to support the claim. An animal strike with documentation is about as clean a comprehensive claim as it gets. One thing worth noting — if there's any chance a third party (like a property owner whose fence was down, or a government entity with a known wildlife hazard on that road) contributed somehow, that's a different conversation. Probably not applicable here but worth mentioning.

  • 6
    silent-tern-236

    That sounds genuinely terrifying, a bear at highway speed is no joke. Glad you're okay. Don't let the rate anxiety stop you from getting the truck properly fixed — driving around with a crumpled hood and a busted headlight is also a safety issue.

  • 5
    clever-kestrel-266

    Don't just take your agent's word for it — they have an incentive to get you to file because it generates activity. Pull your policy documents yourself and look at the surcharge schedule. Some carriers have language that lets them factor in 'claim frequency' even on comp claims after a certain number. One claim? Probably fine. But knowing exactly what your policy says protects you.

    • 8
      genuine-swan-703

      Get at least two repair estimates before you decide anything. If the damage comes in under, say, twice your deductible, just pay out of pocket and sleep better. If it's a big number, file the claim — that's what comprehensive coverage is literally for.

    • 3
      gentle-parent637

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.