The Shoulder
The Shoulder
60
steady-seal-721

My liability limit got blown past — now I'm staring at a gap I can't cover. What happens?

So I'm kind of spiraling right now and could use some perspective from people who've been through something similar.

I rear-ended someone at a light a while back. Totally my fault, I own that. At the time I was young and broke and picked the cheapest policy I could find — bare minimum liability just to be legal on the road. Well, the other driver's repair estimate plus some medical stuff came in way over what my policy actually covers. My insurer paid out my limit and basically closed their file, and now the other party's attorney sent me a letter saying I'm personally on the hook for the rest.

The gap isn't small. We're talking more than I clear in several months of work. I'm juggling two part-time jobs, I rent with roommates, I don't own property. I genuinely do not have these funds sitting around.

A few things I'm wondering:

  • Can the other party actually come after me personally? Like wages, bank accounts, that kind of thing?
  • Is there any chance they'd just accept the policy payout and call it done? I've heard sometimes people do that rather than chase someone who clearly has nothing.
  • Should I talk to a lawyer even though I'm the one who caused the accident? Or is that only useful for the other side?

I know I should've had better coverage. I really do. But beating myself up about it doesn't solve the problem I'm staring at right now. Just looking for honest experiences or any insight into how this usually plays out. Appreciate you all.

9replies

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9 replies

  • 19
    spry-swift-567

    Three things: 1) Talk to a lawyer, even a quick free consult, before you do anything else. 2) Do NOT ignore or ghost the other side — that almost always makes it worse. 3) If you truly have no assets and limited income, you may have more leverage than you think. 'Judgment proof' isn't forever but it matters right now.

  • 18
    cool-heron-291

    I was on the other side of this exact situation — someone hit me and their coverage barely scratched the surface of what my car cost to fix. Their insurer paid out fast and then went quiet. Honestly, my attorney looked into it and found the guy had basically nothing collectible, so we ended up moving on. Not saying that's guaranteed for you, but 'judgment proof' is a real concept and it does factor into decisions on the other side.

    • 10
      kind-passenger679

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

  • 13
    sharp-lynx-987

    How firm is that gap number? Like, is that based on a final settlement they reached with your insurer, or is it still an estimate? Sometimes those initial demand letters have some padding built in. Also — did your own insurer have a defense attorney involved at any point, or did they just cut the check and walk? That changes things a bit.

  • 9
    gentle-crane-853

    That letter from the other party's attorney is designed to scare you into doing something fast. Don't make any promises, don't send any money, and definitely don't sign anything without understanding exactly what it means. They may be hoping you panic and agree to terms that are worse than what you'd get if you just waited and negotiated.

    • 11
      silent-owl-403

      Worked claims for years. When we exhausted a policy limit, the file was basically done on our end — the company's obligation stops there. After that it's between the claimant and the at-fault driver personally. Here's the thing though: collecting a civil judgment is expensive and slow. If you have no real assets and modest income, a lot of attorneys on the other side will advise their client that chasing you isn't worth the cost. That's not a guarantee, but it's reality.

    • 11
      mellow-wolf-125

      A couple of practical things: First, pull together a clear picture of your finances — income, assets, debts. If it ever goes to a formal judgment, courts look at ability to pay when structuring any kind of collection order. Second, some states have exemptions that protect a portion of wages from garnishment. The rules vary a lot by state so that's worth looking up for where you live. Third — and I can't stress this enough — respond to that letter somehow, even if just to say you're looking into it. Going silent tends to escalate things.

  • 7
    mellow-vole-776

    Not legal advice, but: yes, the other party can pursue a judgment against you personally once your policy limits are exhausted. Whether they will depends a lot on what they think they can actually collect. An attorney on your side — even as the at-fault party — can sometimes negotiate a settlement agreement that caps your exposure or sets up a manageable payment arrangement. Worth at least a free consultation. Don't ignore that letter.

  • 5
    wise-fox-625

    Oh wow, I'm so sorry you're dealing with this. The stress of that kind of number hanging over your head must be overwhelming. Please try not to catastrophize before you know exactly what your options are — easier said than done, I know, but people do get through these situations. You're clearly taking it seriously and that matters.