The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
brave-beaver-755

My insurer mailed my subrogation refund to an address I moved out of 8 months ago — what do I do?

So this is a weird one and honestly kind of frustrating. I got rear-ended at a red light back in the spring — totally not my fault, other driver admitted it on scene. I filed a claim through my own insurance to get my car fixed quickly instead of waiting on the at-fault driver's carrier to drag things out.

Fast forward to last week. I was poking around in my insurance app and noticed a payment had been issued. Turns out my insurer went after the other driver's insurance (subrogation, I think it's called?) and recovered my deductible. Great! Except… they mailed the check to an apartment I moved out of almost eight months ago.

I updated my address with them when I moved. I thought I did, anyway. Now I'm stuck trying to figure out:

  • Is that check still valid / can it be cashed by whoever lives there now?
  • Do I have a legal right to that money, and how do I actually get it reissued?
  • Has anyone successfully gotten a replacement check from their insurer without it taking forever?

I've tried calling twice and been on hold for like 45+ minutes each time before giving up. I did submit an address correction through their website but haven't heard back.

I'm not even that stressed about the amount itself — it's just my money and it feels wrong that it's floating around at some address I have no connection to anymore. Anyone dealt with something like this? Did you eventually get it sorted out?

11replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

11 replies

  • 16
    candid-lynx-618

    Ugh, this happened to me with a different type of refund — not subrogation but same idea. My insurer had an old address on file even though I'd updated it. What finally worked was sending a written request via certified mail to their customer service department instead of calling. I got a response within two weeks and they voided the original check and issued a new one. The phone lines are absolutely useless sometimes.

    • 7
      honest-rider797

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 16
    sharp-wren-975

    You definitely have a right to that money — it's a return of YOUR deductible. The check is almost certainly made out in your name, which means nobody else can legally cash it (that would be fraud on their part). Most insurance companies will void and reissue a check if you request it in writing and provide proof of your current address. I'd send an email AND a certified letter so you have a paper trail. Keep copies of everything. If they drag their feet past 30 days, escalate to your state's department of insurance — filing a complaint there tends to light a fire under them fast.

  • 5
    hearty-stoat-712

    Don't assume the check is safe just because it's in your name. Some shady people do attempt to forge or redirect stuff like this. I'd call the insurer and explicitly ask them to flag the original check as VOID before they reissue. Get a confirmation number for that request.

  • 19
    patient-swift-966

    From the inside — this is more common than you'd think. Address mismatches happen all the time, especially when subrogation takes months to resolve after someone has moved. The check is almost certainly still uncashed (most people at a new address would have no idea what it even is), and voiding and reissuing is a standard process. The trick is getting it assigned to the right department. When you call, ask specifically for the 'subrogation recovery' or 'refund reissuance' team — general customer service reps sometimes don't have the tools to handle it and will just pass you around.

  • 14
    swift-owl-157

    That's so stressful, I'm sorry. It's your money and you earned it by going through an accident in the first place. Really hope they sort it out quickly for you.

    • 7
      mellow-offramp774

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

    • 5
      gentle-neighbor649

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 20
    warm-crane-947

    Stop calling. Use the secure message portal or email if they have it — you want everything in writing anyway. State clearly: 'Please void check #XXXX issued on [date] and reissue to my current address.' Attach proof of your new address if you can. If you don't get a response in 10 business days, file a complaint with your state insurance commissioner. That usually gets results faster than any phone call ever will.

  • 19
    tidy-heron-058

    Quick question — when you say you 'updated your address,' do you have any confirmation of that? Like an email or a screenshot? Sometimes what feels like a completed update didn't actually go through on their end. Asking because it might affect how you frame your request to them — if the mistake was on their side vs. a glitch in your submission.

  • 7
    keen-kestrel-659

    The good news is that the money isn't gone — it's just in limbo. Insurance companies reissue stale or misaddressed checks all the time. This is totally fixable, just annoying. Once you get through to the right person it'll probably be resolved pretty quickly. Hang in there!