The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
Insurancebrave-crow-522

Insurance nearly doubled after my accident + moving — feeling completely trapped

I don't even know where to start venting about this because it's been one thing after another.

Back in the spring, some guy blew through a stop sign and I had to swerve hard to avoid a direct hit. Ended up clipping a concrete barrier on the shoulder and my car was totaled. Wasn't my fault — there's a police report, a witness, everything. Didn't matter apparently.

Finally got back on the road with a replacement car. My premium went up, which I half expected, but it still stung. Fine. I dealt with it.

Then I had to relocate for work about two months ago. Updated my address with my insurer like you're supposed to — like a responsible adult — and they slapped me with another huge jump on top of the existing increase. I'm now paying more per month for insurance than I was expecting to spend on groceries. It's genuinely absurd.

What kills me is that none of this feels like it accounts for what actually happened. I avoided an accident. I did the right thing. My record before this was spotless for years. Doesn't seem to matter at all.

I've been told it could be 3+ years before my rate "normalizes" again. Three years of this? While also trying to pay down the car itself?

Has anyone actually found a way to deal with this? Like is shopping around mid-policy even worth it, or do all insurers just see the same history and penalize you the same way? I feel like I'm being punished for being in the right place at the wrong time.

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9 replies

  • 23
    genuine-heron-695

    I used to work on the carrier side and I'll be straight with you — the rate system is largely automated scoring, and human nuance basically doesn't exist in it. A not-at-fault accident still shows as a 'loss event' and some models ding you for that regardless. The location change piling on top is also real; certain zip codes carry higher risk pools and you just get absorbed into that average whether you personally are risky or not.

    Shopping around genuinely helps because different companies weigh these factors differently. Some carriers specifically advertise not penalizing not-at-fault claims — look for that language when you're comparing.

  • 20
    plain-grouse-902

    Quick question — did you file the claim through your own insurance or the other driver's? Sometimes how a claim gets processed determines whether it shows up on your record as a chargeable event. If it went through yours even temporarily that might be part of what's showing up.

    • 4
      quiet-traveler468

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 17
    hearty-swift-921

    Three things: 1) Shop around right now, don't wait. 2) Ask each new quote specifically whether not-at-fault accidents affect your rate — some carriers are better about this than others. 3) If you have documentation proving the other driver caused the accident, some states have protections that limit how much insurers can raise your rate for not-at-fault incidents. Worth a quick look at your state's insurance commissioner website.

  • 16
    spry-badger-738

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but the fact that you have documentation of what happened — a police report, a witness — puts you in a better position than a lot of people. That paper trail matters if you ever need to fight a rate increase or dispute how it's being categorized on your record. Some states even let you add a statement to your driving record explaining a not-at-fault incident. Hang in there.

  • 13
    bright-otter-947

    Ugh, this hit close to home. Almost the exact same thing happened to me — not-at-fault accident, moved cities six months later, and suddenly my rate looked like a car payment. I ended up spending a weekend getting quotes from like six different carriers and found one that weighted my zip code and the at-fault history differently. Saved me a noticeable chunk. It's annoying busywork but it's genuinely worth doing.

    • 15
      mellow-vole-911

      Here's the thing nobody tells you: insurers don't just look at fault, they look at involvement. You were involved in a collision, full stop, and their algorithms often don't care who caused it. They also know that most people won't shop around after a rate hike because switching feels like a hassle. Don't be that person. Get quotes. They're counting on your inertia.

  • 11
    gentle-sparrow-782

    This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry. You did everything right and you're still getting penalized for it. I really hope the shopping-around advice in this thread helps — you shouldn't have to just absorb this.

  • 8
    daring-stoat-192

    Just want to flag — if the other driver was clearly at fault and you haven't already, it might be worth talking to a PI attorney about any unresolved claims from the original accident. Sometimes people settle the property damage (the car) but don't fully account for other stuff. Also, depending on your state, there are consumer protection rules around not-at-fault rate increases. Your state insurance commissioner's office can actually be surprisingly helpful and it's free to contact them.