The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentssilent-heron-109

Minor fender bender I caused turned into a massive payout — now my rates are through the roof

Had to get this off my chest because I'm genuinely stunned at how this played out.

About a year and a half ago I made a bonehead move in a parking garage — misjudged a turn and clipped the rear quarter panel of a parked car that was just starting to pull out. Super low speed, maybe 3 mph. The scrape on their bumper looked like something you'd fix with a bottle of touch-up paint. We pulled over, I owned up immediately, we swapped info, and I filed the claim the same day.

Fast forward to now: my renewal comes in and my premium jumped almost 40%. I nearly fell out of my chair. Called my agent and started digging around, and apparently the other driver filed both a property damage claim AND a bodily injury claim. The bodily injury payout was more than double the property damage. For a parking garage love tap.

I was in the car behind them for a second before the scrape — they hadn't even fully backed out yet. There's no universe where anyone felt that impact in any meaningful way. But my insurer apparently just... paid it. No fight, no pushback that I can see.

I know I was at fault and I own that. But it feels like the system is almost designed to reward inflated claims, and then the rest of us pay for it in higher premiums forever. I'm not even mad at my insurer anymore, I'm just kind of demoralized by the whole thing.

Has anyone else had a minor at-fault incident balloon into something like this? Do you ever even find out the details of what the other party claimed, or does the insurance company just handle it and send you the bad news at renewal time?

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15 replies

  • 12
    daring-sparrow-580

    Unfortunately this is really common and you probably won't get much transparency from your insurer about the breakdown. From my time on the inside, soft-tissue bodily injury claims from low-speed impacts get paid out pretty routinely because fighting them costs more in legal fees than just settling. Doesn't make it right, but your insurer wasn't necessarily being negligent — they were doing the math. The rate hit you're taking is the real gut punch.

    • 9
      tired-dreamer209

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

  • 15
    cool-mole-403

    This is exactly why I tell everyone: the moment there's any contact between vehicles, the other driver is already thinking about their payout, whether or not they're actually hurt. The whole system incentivizes it. Sorry you're living this.

  • 6
    patient-finch-344

    I had something similar — rear-ended someone at like 5 mph in stop-and-go traffic, cracked their plastic trim piece. Eight months later I find out through my renewal that a bodily injury claim was paid. Nobody called an ambulance at the scene, nobody said a word about being hurt. It's demoralizing. You owned the mistake, which most people won't even do, and this is what you get for it.

    • 10
      patient-dreamer977

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

  • 16
    humble-marmot-139

    Not legal advice, but just so you understand the mechanics: once your insurer accepts a bodily injury claim, you generally don't have standing to challenge the settlement amount — that's between them and the claimant. Your policy gave them authority to settle on your behalf. What you can do is ask your agent to walk you through the claim history in detail and whether there are any rate mitigation options going forward. Some carriers will re-tier you after a claim-free period.

  • 6
    keen-marmot-662

    You can actually request a copy of your loss history report (CLUE report) — it's free once a year and it'll show you exactly what was paid under each coverage. Won't change anything, but at least you'd have the full picture instead of guessing. Might also help if you shop carriers, since some weigh at-fault incidents differently than others.

    • 5
      honest-optimist713

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 15
    kind-owl-265

    Shop your insurance. Seriously, do it now. Different carriers weight at-fault accidents differently and some have better forgiveness programs. Staying with the same insurer and just accepting the hike is the worst option here.

    • 6
      kind-survivor517

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

    • 8
      soft-spoken-backseat668

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 14
    daring-heron-256

    How many people were in the other car? And did they go to a doctor or urgent care after — did you ever hear anything at the scene about them feeling off? Not doubting you, but occasionally low-speed impacts do cause real whiplash, especially if someone's head was turned. Doesn't mean the payout was proportionate, just wondering if there's any piece of this that makes more sense with more context.

  • 18
    bold-stoat-793

    At least you found out now and can do something about it — shop around, ask about accident forgiveness going forward, keep your record clean from here. Some people don't find out their rates are inflated for years and just keep overpaying without knowing why.

    • 7
      calm-optimist638

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

    • 0
      soft-spoken-road-soul951

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.