The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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tidy-beaver-977

Left a note after dinging someone's bumper — now they're blowing up my phone with threats

I feel sick writing this but I need to talk it through with people who get it.

So yesterday I was in an unfamiliar parking garage — I borrowed my roommate's SUV because my car is in the shop — and I clipped the rear corner of a parked car while trying to squeeze out of a tight spot. It was slow-speed, like a scrape and a small dent. I didn't freak out and leave. I sat there for a few minutes, took photos of both vehicles and the damage, and wrote out a note with my name and number and tucked it under their wiper. I genuinely tried to do the right thing.

Fast forward maybe 45 minutes and I get a call. The owner says they want to keep insurance out of it entirely and just wants cash. I said sure, get me an estimate first so we know what we're actually talking about. They texted me a quote later and... it is way more than I expected for what I saw. Like the damage in my photos doesn't come close to matching that number.

Here's the thing — I'm a grad student, I work part-time, and I genuinely don't have that kind of money sitting around. I texted back saying I needed a day to figure things out and they responded with something like "don't make me take this further."

I did the honest thing by leaving a note. I didn't hit and run. Now I feel like I'm being punished for being decent?

A few things stressing me out:

  • The quote seems inflated compared to what I actually saw
  • I'm not sure if going through insurance now would hurt me badly
  • Are their threats even real or just pressure tactics?

Has anyone been through something like this? What did you do?

8replies

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8 replies

  • 17
    silent-owl-859

    Call your insurance company today. Yes, your rate might nudge up. But a cash deal with no paperwork, a quote that looks sketchy, and someone already threatening you? That's a much bigger mess. Insurance exists for exactly this. Stop negotiating alone.

  • 14
    calm-wren-138

    Save every single text and voicemail right now — screenshot everything with timestamps visible. If their messages cross into actual threats (like threatening criminal accusations to extract money), that's worth knowing about because there are laws around that kind of coercion. Also, your photos of the damage at the scene are genuinely valuable. If the quote seems wildly out of proportion to what's in those photos, that documentation could matter a lot.

  • 10
    patient-lynx-457

    Not legal advice, but a few things worth knowing: leaving a note is generally considered fulfilling your duty to make contact after a minor parking lot incident. The other party threatening you doesn't change that. Before you pay anything out of pocket, it might be worth a free consultation with a PI attorney just to understand your actual exposure here — many will talk to you for free. The quote being inflated is also something that can be challenged. Don't panic into a bad decision.

    • 11
      quiet-stoat-803

      I just want to say — the anxiety you're feeling right now is so real and valid. The stress of this kind of situation can genuinely mess with your sleep, appetite, all of it. Try to take a breath. You did the ethical thing. That matters. Whatever the outcome, you're not a bad person here.

  • 9
    clever-badger-611

    Oh man, I went through almost the exact same thing last year. Did the right thing, left my info, and suddenly got treated like I was a criminal. One thing I learned the hard way: the moment someone starts throwing around vague threats to pressure you into paying fast, that's usually a sign the situation needs to slow down, not speed up. Don't let the pressure make you agree to something you can't verify or afford.

    • 10
      mellow-marten-210

      That 'keep insurance out of it' line is a huge red flag to me. Sometimes people say that because they already have existing damage on the car and they want YOU to pay for all of it. The quote could include stuff that was there before you ever touched their bumper. I would not hand over a single dollar until you have independent verification of what the damage actually is — and honestly, even then, think hard about whether a cash deal protects you at all if they come back asking for more later.

    • 7
      careful-badger-069

      Can you say more about the quote? Like is it from an actual body shop, or just a number they typed out? And did the damage in your photos look consistent with a slow parking-speed scrape, or was there more to it than you realized in the moment? Not doubting you at all, just trying to understand if the number is truly inflated or if maybe the angle of impact caused more than it looked.

  • 9
    careful-vole-292

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll tell you — private cash deals almost never go well for the person who caused the damage. You have zero documentation, zero finality. Even if you pay them, there's nothing stopping them from filing a claim anyway and saying you never compensated them. At least if you go through insurance, there's a formal release. The 'don't get insurance involved' thing benefits them, not you. Just something to think about before you hand anything over.