The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsbright-crow-017

Insurer says my hit-and-run claim has to go through collision — is that actually right?

So this happened a few weeks ago and I'm still kind of spinning trying to figure out if I'm getting the runaround.

I was sitting at a complete stop in a turn lane when someone plowed into the back of my car and just... drove off. I managed to catch a partial plate but when I gave it to the officer who responded, she said it didn't match any registered vehicle — so either stolen tags or a stolen car, who knows. Either way, nobody is ever getting caught.

I have uninsured motorist property damage (UMPD) on my policy. I literally added it specifically because I was worried about situations like this. But when I called to file, the rep told me my UMPD doesn't apply here and that I have to file under my collision coverage instead.

The problem? My collision deductible is way higher than my UMPD deductible. We're talking a real difference — not pocket change. The rep couldn't point me to any specific language in my policy or any state law that backs up what she's saying. She just kept repeating it like saying it again would make it more true.

I've read through my policy documents twice now and I genuinely cannot find anything that restricts UMPD to parked or unoccupied vehicles. It just says "uninsured motorist" and a hit-and-run driver sure seems uninsured to me.

Has anyone dealt with this? Did your insurer try to steer you toward collision when UMPD should've applied? Did you push back and actually get anywhere? I don't want to pay a higher deductible for something that isn't my fault when I literally bought coverage for this exact scenario.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 7
    clever-vole-070

    This happened to me almost exactly. Different state, but same situation — hit-and-run, I had UMPD, and the claims rep tried to run it as collision. I pushed back and asked them to show me in writing where the policy excluded occupied vehicles from UMPD. They couldn't, and eventually they switched it. Took about two weeks of back and forth but it worked. Document every call with the date, rep's name, and what was said.

    • 10
      bold-tern-097

      A few things worth doing right now: First, file your complaint with your state's department of insurance if they can't produce the policy language supporting their decision — insurers are required to explain denials or coverage shifts with actual citations. Second, get your full policy declarations page and the endorsements section and read every word about UMPD. Sometimes there are endorsement pages that modify the base coverage in ways that aren't obvious. Third, keep the police report safe — the unidentified plate situation is actually helpful documentation for your claim.

    • 14
      mellow-hare-002

      Stop calling and start emailing or using the claims portal. Every conversation you have that isn't in writing is a conversation that didn't happen as far as they're concerned. Send a message today asking them to provide the specific policy provision or state law that requires your claim to be processed under collision rather than UMPD. Simple, polite, direct. If they can't answer that, you've basically already won the argument.

  • 21
    spry-marten-197

    They do this on purpose. Collision claims cost them more in the long run on your rate, but in the short term they'd rather you absorb the higher deductible than they pay the smaller one under UMPD. It's a pressure tactic. Ask them — in writing, via email or their claims portal — to cite the specific policy language or state statute that supports their position. Watch how fast the tone changes when there's a paper trail.

    • 10
      calm-neighbor435

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 9
    cool-swan-380

    Okay so I'll be honest — inside a claims department, UMPD hit-and-run cases get routed differently depending on how the system is set up, and sometimes reps default to collision just because that's what the workflow suggests. It doesn't mean it's correct. The rep you talked to may genuinely not know the nuance, or may be following an internal guideline that doesn't actually match your policy language. Escalate to a supervisor and specifically ask for a coverage determination in writing. That changes things.

    • 8
      honest-survivor244

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

  • 12
    hearty-vole-352

    Not legal advice, but this is a pretty common coverage dispute and it's worth having someone look at your actual policy language. UMPD applicability to occupied-vehicle hit-and-runs varies by state statute and by individual policy wording — if your policy doesn't explicitly carve out occupied vehicles, their position may not hold up. A lot of PI attorneys offer free consultations and will read a declarations page without charging you.

  • 18
    humble-grouse-257

    Just checking — you said no injury, but please make sure that's actually true and not just adrenaline talking. Rear-end impacts can cause soft tissue stuff that doesn't show up until days later. If you develop any neck stiffness, headaches, or back pain in the next week or two, go get checked out and make sure it gets documented. I know you're focused on the car right now but don't forget about you.

    • 7
      calm-neighbor252

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 8
    silent-finch-960

    What state are you in? UMPD rules are genuinely different state to state — some states do restrict hit-and-run UMPD claims to situations where there's physical contact and a witness, or other conditions. I'm not saying your insurer is right, but it's possible there's a state-level wrinkle here that's affecting the coverage call. Worth looking up your state's uninsured motorist statute directly before you go too deep into the fight.