The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
wise-swift-882

Let my cousin borrow my truck, he got a DUI and wrecked it — am I covered??

I'm still kind of in shock honestly. My cousin asked to borrow my truck last weekend for what he said was a quick errand. About six hours later I get a call that he rear-ended a guardrail on the interstate and the truck is probably totaled. Then another call — this one telling me he was arrested for DUI at the scene.

I had no idea he'd been drinking. If I had, obviously I never would've handed over the keys.

Here's where I'm at:

  • I have full coverage on the truck including collision
  • I still owe a decent chunk on the loan, but I don't think I have GAP (going to dig through my paperwork tonight)
  • I filed a claim online right after I found out about the wreck — but I didn't mention the DUI because I genuinely didn't know yet
  • I've left two voicemails with my insurer and haven't heard back

I guess my big fears are: (1) will they deny the claim because a drunk driver was behind the wheel, and (2) do I need to update my claim now that I know about the arrest, or will that hurt me somehow?

Also — can my insurer go after my cousin to recover whatever they pay out? He's basically family and I don't want to destroy the relationship, but honestly I'm also furious at him right now.

Any experience with something like this? I feel like I'm drowning in questions and can't get a real human on the phone.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 8
    bold-vole-301

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me with a friend, not a cousin. My insurer did cover the vehicle — collision is collision, basically. The drunk driving piece was my friend's legal problem, not mine as the owner. That said, my rates did go up at renewal, which stung. Definitely keep trying to get someone on the phone, don't just wait on the voicemail.

    • 4
      hopeful-wanderer476

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 14
    clear-vole-000

    Worked claims for years. Here's the honest answer: your collision coverage generally follows the vehicle, not the driver, as long as you gave permissive use — meaning you actually said yes to lending the truck. The DUI is a criminal matter for your cousin; it doesn't automatically void your physical damage coverage.

    That said, update your claim with the accurate info (including the arrest) as soon as you reach someone. Do NOT let them find out from a police report before you tell them — that looks way worse than just being upfront. Adjusters are trained to spot late disclosures and it creates unnecessary red flags on your file.

    • 4
      curious-rider184

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 14
    quiet-elk-011

    I'd be really careful about what you say and how you say it when you finally get an adjuster on the phone. They're going to ask you a lot of questions and everything gets recorded. You're not obligated to speculate or give long explanations — just answer what you actually know. If they ask 'did you know he had been drinking,' the honest answer is no, and leave it there. Don't over-explain.

    • 22
      careful-marten-694

      Not legal advice, but as a general matter, permissive use is really the key question here — you gave him the keys voluntarily, so the coverage should attach to the vehicle. Where it could get complicated is if your policy has any exclusions around unlicensed drivers or people with recent violations. Pull out your declarations page and look for an 'exclusions' section. If anything looks sketchy, a quick consult with a PI attorney (many do free ones) could give you clarity fast.

    • 20
      warm-owl-872

      Was your cousin injured in the crash? I know you're focused on the truck and the insurance right now, which makes sense, but if he has any injuries that weren't treated at the scene — whiplash, head stuff, anything — those can show up days later. Just worth a check-in even if you're mad at him.

    • 5
      honest-passenger769

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

  • 19
    swift-crow-503

    On your GAP question — check your original loan paperwork or your lender's online portal. Sometimes GAP is bundled in at the dealership and people forget they have it (or don't have it). If the payout ends up less than what you owe on the loan, that gap comes out of your pocket unless you have that coverage. Worth knowing before the adjuster gives you a number.

    Also, yes — insurers can and sometimes do pursue what's called subrogation against the at-fault driver to recoup what they paid out. Whether they actually chase your cousin depends on a lot of factors, but it's possible.

  • 9
    patient-crane-356

    Three things: 1) Find your policy documents tonight, don't wait. 2) Update your claim with the DUI info before they call you — transparency now is way better than looking like you hid it. 3) Figure out the GAP situation ASAP because if that truck is totaled and you're underwater on the loan, that's a separate problem you need to get ahead of.

  • 14
    brave-marmot-350

    This sounds incredibly stressful, I'm sorry. You did nothing wrong here and you're the one stuck cleaning up the mess. Really hope the insurance comes through for you — please update us when you hear back.