The Shoulder
The Shoulder
70
tidy-swift-725

I made a dumb move but the other driver also screwed up — who's actually at fault here?

Okay so I need to be honest because I have dashcam footage and I want real opinions, not just reassurance.

I was on a two-lane highway last week and there was a slow-moving box truck ahead of me. I saw a legal passing zone coming up and I pulled out to pass. Here's where it gets complicated — I committed to the pass but the truck was going way slower than I expected, so I was still alongside it when the passing zone was ending.

At the same time, a pickup in the oncoming lane drifted partially into my lane while I was mid-pass. No turn signal, no apparent reason — he just wandered over. We sideswiped each other. My front quarter panel and his mirror/door.

Now, I'll admit I probably should've aborted the pass earlier. I know that. But also — that pickup had no business crossing the center line. My dashcam shows both things clearly.

The other driver is telling his insurance I was fully in his lane and caused everything. That is NOT what the footage shows. It's more like we both made bad decisions at the same time.

His insurance already called me and they were super friendly, which honestly freaked me out more than if they'd been rude.

My questions:

  • Can fault actually be split between two drivers?
  • Does my dashcam footage help me or hurt me here (since it also shows my pass)?
  • Should I even be talking to his insurance without a lawyer?

I feel sick about this whole thing. First accident in 11 years of driving.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 12
    bright-elk-316

    Fault can absolutely be split — it happened to me after a merge accident where we both did something questionable. My state uses comparative fault, so I ended up being like 30% responsible and the other driver 70%. I still got compensated, just not the full amount. The percentage really depends on your state's rules though.

  • 5
    quick-stoat-251

    That 'super friendly' call from the other driver's insurance? That's a tactic. They're hoping you'll say something casual that they can use to pin more blame on you. I'd be really careful about how much you share with them. Stick to basic facts — what happened, when, where — and don't editorialize or apologize. Anything that sounds like you're accepting blame gets noted.

    • 9
      tidy-beaver-160

      Former claims rep here. Dashcam footage is almost always net-positive for the person who has it, even if it shows some fault on your end. Why? Because without it, adjusters often just default to 50/50 or believe whoever tells the better story. With footage, there's an actual record. Yes, it shows your pass — but it also shows him crossing the line. That matters a lot. Don't hide the footage, but also don't hand it over to his insurance before you talk to your own carrier.

    • 0
      curious-rider523

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 21
    clear-wren-948

    Not legal advice, but situations like yours — where both drivers contributed to the crash — are actually pretty common in PI cases. Most states have comparative negligence frameworks that allow for shared fault. The dashcam is likely your biggest asset here. I'd strongly suggest at least a free consultation with a personal injury attorney before you give any recorded statements to the other side. Many will review the footage for free.

    • 5
      brave-beaver-838

      11 years accident-free and one complicated moment doesn't erase that. You're clearly taking this seriously and being honest about your role in it — that already puts you ahead of the other driver who's apparently lying to his insurance. Hoping this resolves fairly for you. 💙

  • 14
    brave-tern-807

    One thing worth knowing: when the other driver's insurance calls you, you are NOT required to give a recorded statement to them. You can politely decline and say you're still gathering information. That's totally within your rights. Your own insurance is a different story — cooperating with them is usually required under your policy. But the opposing carrier? You can pump the brakes on that conversation.

    • 12
      plain-dove-215

      Upload that dashcam footage somewhere safe RIGHT NOW — cloud backup, email it to yourself, whatever. Then stop talking to anyone about this except your own insurance and possibly a lawyer. You already know you made a partial mistake, which is fine and human, but you don't need to keep volunteering that to people who are paid to use it against you.

    • 2
      honest-commuter519

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 21
    sharp-elk-419

    Please don't forget to get checked out medically even if you feel okay right now. Adrenaline masks a lot after collisions and I've seen people feel totally fine for 48-72 hours and then wake up with serious neck or back symptoms. Document everything physically — even if it feels minor. Go to urgent care or your doctor and just say you were in an accident and want to be evaluated. It matters for your records.