The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
Insurancekeen-mole-832

Insurance just canceled my whole policy over an address update I missed — mid-claim. Is this legal??

I'm still kind of in shock so bear with me.

About three weeks ago I got into a fender-bender in a parking garage — another driver clipped my front quarter panel pulling out of a spot. Pretty low-speed stuff, but there was real damage to both vehicles. We exchanged info, I filed a claim with my insurance the next day like you're supposed to.

The claims rep called me to go over everything, totally routine. Near the end of the call she starts asking about my listed address, and I realized — oh no — I never updated it after I moved last spring. I'd been meaning to do it forever, just kept getting pushed down the to-do list between work stress and helping my mom after her surgery. I told the rep right then, explained the situation, and she said "okay, we'll note that."

Fast forward to yesterday. I get an email saying my policy has been rescinded — not just the claim denied, the whole policy wiped out. Then an actual letter in the mail saying the claim is denied due to "material misrepresentation" because of the address discrepancy.

I'm freaking out. I've had this policy for over two years and paid every premium on time. The address I moved to is literally in the same city — same zip code even. It's not like I moved to a different state or something that would massively change my risk profile.

Now I'm on the hook for whatever the other driver decides to come after me for, with zero coverage, and I didn't even get a warning or a chance to fix it before they pulled the rug out.

Has anyone dealt with anything like this? Can they actually do this retroactively? Do I have any recourse here or am I just screwed?

14replies

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14 replies

  • 7
    hearty-wren-547

    This happened to a coworker of mine — not the exact same situation but her insurer tried to use some minor paperwork thing to wriggle out of a claim. She pushed back hard and ended up getting somewhere. The key thing she told me was: don't just accept their first answer. Write everything down, get everything in writing from them, and don't let them just verbally explain why they're denying you.

    • 9
      wise-beaver-981

      They updated your address in the system THEN canceled you? That is so sus. It almost feels like they processed the update, realized the claim existed, and then used the update as evidence that the old address was "wrong" to justify the rescission. Classic. These companies have entire departments figuring out how not to pay claims.

  • 26
    keen-owl-025

    I used to work in claims and I'll be honest with you — "material misrepresentation" is a clause that gets thrown around a lot, but it's supposed to mean something that actually would have changed how the policy was written or priced. Same city, same zip? That's a really thin argument for rescission. What they're banking on is that you'll just accept the denial and go away. A lot of people do. Don't be one of them.

    Also worth noting: most states require insurers to give advance notice before canceling a policy, and there are rules about retroactive rescission specifically. Your state's Department of Insurance is a real resource here — filing a complaint there costs you nothing and sometimes gets insurers moving fast.

  • 18
    hearty-elk-783

    Not legal advice, but what you're describing — a retroactive rescission mid-claim over an address change that didn't meaningfully affect your risk — is something that some courts have pushed back on pretty hard. "Material misrepresentation" has a legal definition, and "I forgot to update my address within the same zip code" may not meet that bar. Talking to a PI or insurance bad faith attorney for even a free consult would be worth your time. Many work on contingency for exactly this kind of thing.

  • 7
    clear-badger-940

    A couple of practical things to do right now:

    1. Request your full claims file in writing — you're entitled to it. 2. Get the denial reason in writing if you only have it verbally so far. 3. Check your state's Department of Insurance website — most states have a formal complaint process and insurers are required to respond.

    The timeline you're describing (address updated, then canceled) could be important documentation if this goes further. Save every email, every letter, note down every phone call with dates and who you spoke to.

    • 3
      curious-traveler598

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 8
    clever-lynx-720

    Just want to check in — are you okay physically? Sometimes when the accident seems minor we brush off stuff and then a few weeks later something starts bothering you. Don't let the insurance chaos distract you from actually making sure you're not dealing with any delayed symptoms.

    • 2
      quiet-passenger706

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

  • 13
    gentle-stoat-675

    File a complaint with your state insurance commissioner. Today. It's free, it's easy, and insurers take those complaints seriously because they have licensing to protect. You can deal with lawyers and everything else in parallel, but that complaint gets the ball rolling immediately and creates an official record.

    • 4
      level-road-soul590

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 7
    clever-wren-243

    Not dismissing your frustration at all, but did you ever actually look at your policy documents to see what the notification requirements are for address changes? Some policies have a clause that puts the burden on you to update within a certain window. I'm not saying that makes the rescission fair — just asking because knowing what your actual policy says will matter a lot if you're going to fight this.

    • 10
      calm-rider460

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

  • 17
    plain-mole-490

    The fact that you reported honestly during the call, including admitting the address hadn't been updated, actually works in your favor here. You didn't try to hide anything — you were upfront. That's a very different posture than someone who was actually trying to commit fraud, and it matters if this gets reviewed by a regulator or ends up in front of anyone making a judgment call.

    • 8
      steady-driver837

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.