The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancecalm-dove-124

Insurance payout went to my mom — it's MY car, MY money. What do I do?

So I'm in a really frustrating situation and I honestly don't know where to turn. I got rear-ended a few months ago and my car was totaled. The other driver was clearly at fault — I have the police report and everything.

Here's the problem: I'm 22 and when I first got the car, my mom added it to her policy because the rate was cheaper. I've been paying her back every single month for my share of the premium — I have Venmo receipts going back almost two years. The car title is 100% in my name. I bought it myself, I made the payments, it's mine.

The insurance settlement came through and the check went straight to my mom as the named policyholder. Now she's refusing to hand it over and is saying she needs it for other bills. I love my mom but this is genuinely not her money. I don't have a car, I can't get to work reliably, and I'm watching my financial situation get worse every week while she's sitting on a check that should be mine.

I've tried talking to her calmly. I've tried involving other family members. Nothing is working.

Does anyone have experience with something like this? Like — does being the titled owner mean I have a legal right to that money? Does it matter that I was paying into the policy? I genuinely don't know if I have any real options here or if I'm just stuck.

I really don't want to make this into a huge family war but also... that money was supposed to replace my car.

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10 replies

  • 20
    sharp-swan-495

    Real talk: stop trying to resolve this through family conversations. It's not working. Send one final written message (text is fine, email is better) clearly stating the car was titled in your name, you paid into the policy, and you expect the funds transferred by X date. Then if nothing happens, look into small claims. You have receipts. That's your case right there.

    • 22
      warm-otter-754

      From my time on the inside — when we cut a check to a named insured, we're going off policy records, not the title. We don't always cross-check ownership. But that doesn't mean the titled owner has no rights, it just means the insurer took the easier path. If you contact them and provide proof of title, some carriers will actually reissue or cut a secondary check. It depends on the company and how motivated the rep is, but it's absolutely worth asking specifically about their process for disputed proceeds.

    • 9
      gentle-neighbor489

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

  • 14
    wise-kestrel-123

    Just want to make sure I understand — is the title solely in your name, or are there any co-signers or lienholders listed? And was there an auto loan on it? That can complicate who technically has a claim to the proceeds. Not saying you're wrong, just want to make sure you know exactly what the title says before you go in swinging.

  • 13
    bright-beaver-093

    I went through almost this exact thing with my dad a couple years back — different details but same basic nightmare. What finally worked for me was sending a formal written request (just an email honestly) spelling out that the car was in my name and I expected the funds transferred by a specific date. Something about seeing it in writing made it feel more real to him. It shouldn't have to come to that with family but sometimes it just does.

  • 11
    careful-owl-691

    Also just want to flag — have you talked to the insurance company directly at all? Sometimes when a check is issued to the wrong party in a situation like this, the insurer will actually want to know. They don't want liability for paying the wrong person. It's worth a call to explain you're the titled owner and ask what their process is.

  • 10
    candid-dove-679

    Not legal advice, but this is worth understanding: in most states, the titled owner of a vehicle has a strong equitable claim to insurance proceeds from its total loss, even if someone else is the named insured. The fact that you have payment receipts showing you funded the premiums strengthens that significantly. A quick consult with a PI or even a general practice attorney could clarify your options — many do free consults. Don't wait too long on this.

    • 8
      warm-vole-774

      I'm so sorry. This is genuinely awful — you're already dealing with the stress of losing your car in an accident and now this on top of it. The fact that you've been so patient trying to handle it calmly says a lot. You deserve that money. Please don't let the family dynamic guilt you out of advocating for yourself.

    • 3
      grounded-co-pilot812

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

  • 8
    candid-wren-074

    A few things worth knowing: (1) you can contact the insurance company directly and ask them to document that you are the titled owner — get that on record. (2) Your Venmo receipts showing premium contributions are genuinely useful evidence. (3) Depending on your state, if informal resolution fails, small claims court is actually a real option for something like this and you don't need a lawyer to file. The titled ownership plus payment history is a pretty clear paper trail.