The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancebright-vole-474

Low-speed sideswipe, cop said shared fault — do I call my insurance or just wait?

So this happened to me a couple days ago and I'm still going back and forth on what to do.

I was merging left on the highway during morning traffic and another car was simultaneously merging right. Classic blind-spot situation — neither of us saw each other until we made contact. Super low speed, more of a scrape than a crash. We both pulled over, checked on each other (both totally fine), and waited for the officer.

The responding officer basically said we both made lane changes at the same time without fully checking, so he noted it as shared/mutual fault. He told us we could file with our insurance companies but weren't required to.

Here's my situation:

  • My car has a scrape along the rear quarter panel. Honestly doesn't even look that bad to me.
  • My deductible is $750, and I'm guessing my damage is somewhere in that ballpark anyway, so I'd probably be paying out of pocket regardless.
  • The other driver seemed really calm about it, we exchanged info, and she said she'd "think about whether it was worth it."
  • No injuries on either side.

So what's the move here? Do I proactively call my insurer just to have it on record? Or do I sit tight and see if the other driver files first? I'm worried that if she files and I haven't reported it, it looks bad. But I'm also worried that calling kicks off a whole process that raises my rates over essentially nothing.

Has anyone been in this exact spot? What did you do?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 9
    daring-swan-556

    I was in almost this exact situation last year. I waited to see what the other driver did — she ended up not filing and neither did I. Saved us both the headache. That said, I was sweating it for like two weeks waiting to find out. If you can handle that anxiety, waiting might be fine.

  • 7
    patient-badger-712

    Heads up: even if you don't file, if the other driver files against your policy, your insurer is going to reach out to you and you'll look like you were hiding it. I'd at least do a courtesy call to your own insurance just to put it on the record from your perspective first. Frame it as informational, not as a claim. There's usually a difference between 'reporting an incident' and 'opening a claim.'

  • 11
    cool-badger-758

    Former adjuster here. What the skeptic said is right — reporting and claiming are two different things. You can call and say 'I want to note an incident but I'm not opening a claim at this time.' That protects you if the other driver files later, because now there's a record of your version of events logged before their version. If you only show up in the file as the other party, adjusters are going to be working primarily with the story they heard first.

  • 13
    humble-swan-026

    Also worth checking your policy documents — some policies actually require you to report accidents within a certain window regardless of whether you file a claim. If you skip that and it comes up later, they could use it against you. Not trying to scare you, just something a lot of people don't realize until it's too late.

    • 3
      patient-optimist732

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 16
    mellow-otter-793

    Call your insurance, tell them what happened, don't open a claim yet. Takes 10 minutes and covers you. Done.

  • 20
    sharp-crane-706

    Did you actually get the other driver's insurance info and take photos at the scene? Because 'she seemed calm' doesn't mean much — people's memories of fault shift a lot once they start talking to their own insurance company or a friend who tells them they should get money for this.

    • 2
      patient-dreamer467

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

  • 20
    kind-fox-365

    Honestly just glad you're okay! That kind of thing can shake you up even if it seems minor. I'd lean toward making the quick call just for peace of mind — not knowing what the other person is going to do sounds way more stressful than just getting ahead of it.

    • 2
      quiet-passenger407

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 6
    candid-swan-247

    Not legal advice, but shared-fault accidents can get complicated if one party later claims an injury — even a minor one that 'showed up' a few days later. Having your account logged with your insurer early protects your version of the timeline. Just something to keep in mind before deciding to stay quiet on it.