The Shoulder
The Shoulder
65
curious-dove-487

Just got sideswiped by a rental car driver — sitting in urgent care now, totally lost

This literally happened two hours ago and I'm still in shock. I was driving through an intersection on a green light when a rental car blew through the red and hit the passenger side of my car hard enough to spin me halfway around. The other driver is from out of state and the car is definitely a rental — I saw the barcode stickers on the windshield.

I drove myself here to urgent care because my neck and left arm have been aching since it happened. Waiting on some imaging now. Honestly the pain isn't even my biggest stress right now — it's everything else piling up.

My car is probably totaled. I still owe money on it. Like, will the at-fault driver's insurance actually pay off my whole loan, or just what the car is "worth" on paper? Because those two numbers are NOT the same and I can't afford to be underwater on a car I can't even drive anymore.

Also — I don't have rental coverage on my own policy. Am I just stuck without a car while this gets sorted out, or is the other driver's insurance supposed to cover a rental for me?

And the big question: do I need a lawyer? I keep going back and forth. Part of me thinks it's overkill since liability seems obvious, but the other part of me is like… this is a rental car situation with an out-of-state driver and I have no idea how that complicates things.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? I feel like I'm drowning in questions and I haven't even left urgent care yet.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 20
    candid-crane-751

    Oh man, I went through almost this exact situation last year — rental car, out-of-state driver, clear liability. I thought it would be simple because "obviously" the other person was at fault. It was NOT simple. The rental company's insurance was a completely different beast to deal with than a regular personal auto policy. There were three different parties pointing fingers at each other about who owed what. Get a lawyer, seriously. It doesn't cost you anything upfront and it made a huge difference for me just having someone who knew which company to actually talk to.

    • 1
      weary-dreamer286

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 15
    clever-beaver-632

    Former claims adjuster here. A few things to know: rental car companies typically carry their own liability insurance that kicks in when their renter causes an accident, but the renter may also have coverage through their personal policy OR through the credit card they used to book the rental. So there could legitimately be multiple layers of coverage available — which sounds good but can also mean delays while everyone figures out who's primary.

    On the loan gap issue — if your car is totaled, the at-fault party's insurance owes you the actual cash value of your vehicle, not what you owe on it. If those numbers don't match, that's what gap insurance is for. If you don't have gap insurance, you may be on the hook for the difference unless you can negotiate or pursue other avenues. Something to flag immediately.

  • 14
    gentle-bison-563

    Please please PLEASE don't give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance until you've talked to someone. They're going to call you fast — possibly tomorrow — and they're going to sound super friendly and helpful. They are not your friend. Anything you say can get used to minimize your claim later. You're in urgent care right now, you don't even know the full extent of your injuries yet. There's no reason to rush.

    • 10
      weary-optimist293

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 12
    bright-crow-316

    Not legal advice, but rental car accident cases genuinely are more complicated than standard two-car accidents — multiple potential defendants, layered insurance coverage, and sometimes the rental agreement itself becomes relevant. The fact that liability looks clear-cut right now doesn't mean the payout process will be. Most PI attorneys work on contingency so there's no upfront cost to at least have a consultation. Might be worth it just to understand your options before you start talking to any insurance company.

    • 4
      quiet-optimist310

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

  • 19
    silent-bison-996

    Focus on the medical piece right now — I know the car stuff feels urgent but your health has to come first. Neck and arm pain after a side impact can develop over 24-72 hours, so even if your imaging comes back okay tonight, don't dismiss symptoms that get worse over the next few days. Make sure you follow up with your primary care doctor and document EVERYTHING — every symptom, every appointment, every time you can't do something you normally would. That documentation matters a lot later.

  • 15
    steady-wren-350

    I'm so sorry this happened to you. Please make sure someone knows where you are right now — do you have a friend or family member who can come sit with you? Urgent care after an accident is a lot to process alone and honestly having someone there to help you remember what the doctor says is really helpful.

    • 7
      gentle-neighbor416

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 21
    careful-marmot-868

    Here's the short version: yes, the at-fault driver's insurance should cover your rental while your car is being dealt with — get that in writing as soon as you open a claim. The gap between your loan balance and your car's value is a real problem if you don't have gap coverage — ask about it directly and don't let them close the claim until it's resolved. And yes, get a lawyer — not because you're being greedy, but because you literally don't know what you don't know, and rental car claims have more moving parts than a normal accident.

    • 5
      thankful-mile-marker479

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 6
    sharp-newt-686

    Quick question — did you get a copy of the police report or at least a report number? And did you photograph the scene, both cars, the intersection, everything? I ask because "green light" situations can sometimes get contested even when they seem obvious. Just want to make sure your version of events is well documented before anything gets murky.