The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentswarm-swift-413

Let my teenager drive the rental while our car was in the shop — now there's been another accident

Yeah, I already know what I did was dumb, so please spare me the lecture (or at least be gentle). Here's what happened.

Our family car got rear-ended a few weeks ago and it's been sitting at the body shop waiting on parts forever. The rental we got is technically in my name. My 16-year-old son needed to get to his morning shift at work — it's literally less than two miles away — and I let him take the rental a handful of times. I figured it was no big deal for such a short trip.

Well. This morning a driver ran a stop sign and T-boned him at an intersection. My son is physically okay, just shaken up. The other driver was cited on the spot by the officer who responded. So liability seems pretty clear — the other driver was 100% at fault.

But now I'm spiraling about the rental agreement. He obviously wasn't listed as an authorized driver. I'm an additional driver but he is not. I don't even know if I should proactively call the rental company or wait to see how this plays out.

My questions:

  • Is the at-fault driver's insurance still on the hook for the rental damage even if my son wasn't supposed to be driving it?
  • Am I going to get hit with some massive out-of-pocket bill from the rental company?
  • Did I accidentally void any coverage by letting him drive?

I've been sick to my stomach all day. He's safe and that's what matters, but I'm terrified about what comes next financially. Anyone been through something like this or have any idea how this typically shakes out?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 22
    silent-otter-197

    Ugh, I haven't been in this exact situation but something similar — I let my younger brother drive my rental 'just once' and he scraped a parking garage pillar. The rental company absolutely came after me for the damage. That said, your situation is different because there's a clearly at-fault third party. I'd honestly focus your energy on making sure that other driver's insurance accepts liability first. If they do, a lot of your other headaches might shrink significantly.

    • 20
      clear-swift-035

      A few things worth knowing: rental agreements almost always have an unauthorized driver clause that technically puts liability back on you for any damage during that period. BUT — and this matters — many states have consumer protection rules that limit how aggressively rental companies can enforce those clauses when a third party is at fault. Also check whether you have a credit card you used to pay for the rental. A lot of cards have secondary rental coverage that might help fill gaps. Not legal advice, just stuff worth looking into before you assume the worst.

    • 4
      tired-dreamer134

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 12
    mellow-hare-182

    Whatever you do, be really careful about how much you voluntarily tell the rental company right now. I'm not saying lie — I'm saying don't call them up and lead with 'hey my unlisted teenager was driving.' Let the claim process unfold. Adjusters are trained to find reasons to shift costs onto YOU, and handing them that information upfront gives them a head start.

    • 4
      kind-passenger223

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 24
    spry-wolf-153

    Okay so here's what I've seen from the inside: if the other driver's liability is clear-cut (and a stop-sign violation with a police citation is pretty clear-cut), their insurance typically pays for the rental vehicle damage regardless of who was driving it. The argument is that the damage wouldn't have happened at all but for their insured's negligence. That said, the rental company may still pursue you separately under your contract for the unauthorized driver violation — those are two different things. You could potentially end up with one resolved and still owe the rental company fees.

  • 16
    wise-heron-099

    First — really glad your son is physically okay. Please make sure he actually gets checked out by a doctor even if he feels fine right now. Adrenaline masks a LOT after a collision, and soft tissue stuff from a T-bone can show up days later. Don't let the financial stress make you skip that step. Document everything medically from the start.

  • 15
    bold-newt-241

    Here's what I'd do right now: (1) Get the police report number secured. (2) File a claim with the at-fault driver's insurance immediately and let them know the rental was involved. (3) Don't volunteer extra details to anyone until you understand your exposure. You're not in as bad a shape as you think — a clear police citation goes a long way.

  • 9
    quiet-grouse-314

    Did you purchase the rental company's damage waiver when you picked up the car? That actually matters a lot here. If you bought their CDW/LDW, it might cover the vehicle damage regardless of who was driving, depending on the specific terms. If you skipped it and relied on your personal auto policy or credit card instead, that's a different story. What coverage did you actually select at the counter?

    • 2
      hopeful-optimist848

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 16
    bold-kestrel-847

    Your kid walked away from a T-bone collision. That's honestly the only thing that matters today. The money stuff is stressful and real, but it's all solvable. Breathe. You've got a clear paper trail of fault on the other driver's side, which puts you in a much better position than most people posting here.

  • 9
    careful-heron-549

    Not legal advice, but this scenario has more nuance than it might seem. The unauthorized driver issue affects YOUR contractual relationship with the rental company — it doesn't necessarily eliminate the at-fault driver's obligation to pay for damages they caused. Those are separate legal relationships. If the other carrier tries to use the unauthorized driver issue to reduce their payout, that's worth pushing back on. Might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand where you stand before you start making statements to anyone.