The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancebold-otter-818

Insurance says I was in an accident I never had — how do I fight this?

So I got a letter from my current insurance carrier saying there's an at-fault accident on my record from roughly 18 months ago. Problem is — I was never in an accident. Not even a fender bender. I don't know where this is coming from.

The timing is weird because I sold my old sedan around that period and bought something different. Could someone have used my old plate number? Could there have been some kind of data mixup? I genuinely have no idea how this ends up on my history.

Now my premium just jumped a noticeable amount and when I asked why, they pointed to this phantom incident as the reason. When I dug into it, they gave me almost no details — just a date range and a vague claim reference number.

I've already pulled my driving record from the DMV and there's no citation or violation listed for that timeframe. So whatever this "accident" is, it didn't involve the police or a ticket as far as I can tell.

I'm honestly pretty rattled. Like, is someone out there filing claims using my identity or my old vehicle info? How do I even start untangling this?

Has anyone dealt with something like this before? What steps did you take to track down where the claim actually came from and get it removed from your record? I don't even know who to call first.

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11 replies

  • 18
    bright-marmot-588

    This happened to something similar to my brother-in-law — turned out the old plate on his traded-in car got reassigned and the new owner had a fender bender. The DMV and the dealership both had their hands in the mess. It took him a few months but he got it cleared up by getting documentation of the exact sale/transfer date and sending it to the insurer in writing. Paper trail is everything here.

    • 17
      bold-otter-482

      Don't just call and chat with your insurer about this casually — anything you say can get logged and used to muddy the water later. Ask them in writing for the full claim file associated with that reference number. They are required to give you that information. Once you see the actual details — date, location, other party — you'll know what you're actually dealing with.

    • 4
      patient-optimist141

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 10
    silent-badger-792

    I used to work claims and this kind of thing happens more than people realize. A few possibilities: 1) a data entry error where a VIN or plate got transposed, 2) the vehicle was sold but the title transfer was delayed or never properly filed, or 3) actual fraud where someone is staging claims with old vehicle info. Request the CLUE report on your name — that's the claims database insurers use. You're entitled to a free copy once a year. That report will show you every claim tied to your name or your vehicles and you can dispute errors directly.

    • 17
      mellow-newt-082

      Quick question — when you sold the old vehicle, did you go through a dealership or a private sale? And did you confirm the title actually transferred to the new owner? Because if the title was never properly changed over, you might technically still be on record as the registered owner during the incident window, even if you had zero involvement. That would explain a lot.

  • 15
    bright-seal-152

    A couple of practical steps: First, pull your CLUE report like the other commenter said — LexisNexis runs it and you can request it online. Second, get documentation of when you sold the old vehicle — bill of sale, title transfer record, anything dated. If the phantom incident happened after your sale date, that's a strong paper argument. Third, file a dispute with the insurer's fraud department specifically, not just general customer service. Fraud disputes get routed differently and taken more seriously.

    • 5
      quiet-wanderer342

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

    • 2
      soft-spoken-sidewalk273

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 20
    bright-sparrow-185

    Not legal advice, but if you've exhausted the insurer's internal dispute process and they're still holding this against you, your state's Department of Insurance has a formal complaint process. Insurers don't love DOI complaints — they create paperwork and scrutiny. It's a useful lever. You may also want a quick consult with an attorney if you think actual identity fraud is involved, because that can have implications beyond just your car insurance.

  • 14
    sharp-swan-890

    That sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The idea that someone might be out there using your information without you knowing is genuinely unsettling. Please don't let the insurance company brush you off — keep pushing until you get real answers.

  • 14
    patient-tern-124

    Three things, in order: get the CLUE report, get proof of your vehicle sale date, and submit a written dispute. Don't do any of this over the phone — email or certified mail only so you have a record. If they won't budge after a written dispute, escalate to your state's insurance commissioner. This is fixable, it's just annoying.