The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentspatient-hare-082

Lane-change crash mid-intersection — am I really the one at fault here?

Still kind of in shock about how this whole thing played out and honestly just need some outside perspective.

I was making a left turn at a green light. I checked both directions, no one was close enough to be a problem, so I went. Midway through my turn, a car that had been in the far right lane suddenly cut across two lanes while going through the intersection and slammed into my driver's side. Like, who does that?

When we pulled over and exchanged info, the other driver basically admitted they were trying to "get ahead of traffic" before the light changed. That felt pretty significant to me.

Fast forward to today — I called my insurance to give my recorded statement and the rep told me there's a chance I could be found partially at fault because I was the one turning left. I get that left-turning drivers usually have to yield, but I did yield — there was nothing coming when I started the turn. The other car wasn't even in the lane they hit me from until they decided to switch lanes mid-intersection.

The intersection does have a camera but apparently the angle doesn't clearly show where the other car was positioned when I initiated the turn. My adjuster sounded pretty noncommittal about the whole thing.

Is this just how it goes with left-turn accidents, even when the other driver is clearly doing something reckless? Has anyone dealt with a situation where the other driver changed lanes in an intersection and insurance still tried to pin it on you? Any advice on what I should be doing right now would be really appreciated.

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12 replies

  • 14
    kind-heron-746

    Ugh, I went through something almost identical last year. Left turn, clear road, then out of nowhere someone blew past from a lane they shouldn't have even been in. My adjuster gave me the same "left-turners must yield" speech like it was the end of the discussion. What helped me was getting a copy of the police report and making sure the officer noted the other driver's lane change — that detail mattered way more than I expected later in the process.

  • 5
    bold-swan-233

    Please be really careful about what you say to your own insurance going forward. That recorded statement you already gave — just know they can use anything in it. Adjusters aren't on your side even when they sound friendly and neutral. The "we're not sure yet" tone is sometimes a setup to lowball or shift liability onto you. Don't volunteer extra information. Less is more.

  • 10
    daring-raven-575

    Honestly, from the inside, left-turn claims get flagged almost automatically as "possible fault" on the turning driver because that's the default assumption built into how files get reviewed. It doesn't mean that's the final decision — it's just the starting point. What moves the needle is evidence: witness statements, any dashcam footage (yours or nearby), and especially if there's anything documenting that the other driver changed lanes inside the intersection. That's illegal in most states and it shifts a lot of the picture.

    If the other driver admitted anything at the scene, write it down word for word right now before you forget. That could matter.

    • 7
      curious-passenger325

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

  • 14
    silent-hare-415

    Not legal advice, but — changing lanes inside an intersection is prohibited in a huge number of states, and if that applies where you are, it's a meaningful factor in how fault gets allocated. Comparative negligence rules mean this doesn't have to be all-or-nothing. A PI attorney can usually review the basics for free and tell you whether it's worth pushing back on the liability determination. Might be worth a conversation before you accept whatever split your insurer proposes.

    • 5
      plainspoken-road-soul457

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 17
    candid-badger-223

    Two things: get a dashcam for the future (seriously, they're cheap and this situation is exactly why), and right now go find any witnesses from that intersection. Anyone who was stopped at that light may have seen the lane change. Even one person willing to write a statement changes your position completely.

    • 5
      patient-elk-626

      Few questions that might matter here: Was there a dedicated left-turn signal or were you turning on a plain green? Did anyone else witness the lane change? And did the police come out — if so, was anyone cited? Those details will shape how this actually plays out with insurance.

    • 8
      steady-traveler414

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

  • 19
    genuine-seal-187

    How are you doing physically? Side-impact crashes can do a number on you even when you feel okay at first — ribs, shoulder, neck stuff can take a day or two to fully show up. Please go get checked out if you haven't already, and make sure everything is documented medically. That matters both for your health and for any claim down the road.

    • 2
      grounded-road-soul963

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 20
    curious-swan-904

    I'm sorry you're dealing with this, it sounds so stressful. The fact that the other driver basically admitted they were cutting through traffic to beat the light is huge — I really hope you wrote that down or can remember exactly what they said. That seems like it should count for something.