The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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sharp-sparrow-007

Not at fault but still being told I have to pay my deductible?? Makes no sense

So I got rear-ended at a red light about six weeks ago. Dead stop, other driver plowed right into me. Police report clearly lists the other driver as at fault — no ambiguity whatsoever. My car had pretty significant damage and I've been dealing with neck and back pain since.

I filed through my own insurance because I wanted things handled quickly. They approved the repairs, great. But then when I asked about my deductible, the adjuster basically told me I'd still have to pay it upfront and they'd try to get it back from the at-fault party's situation — but couldn't promise anything because of how the other driver's coverage is structured.

Wait… what? I'm not at fault. The report says I'm not at fault. Why am I out of pocket for someone else's mistake?

The adjuster kept using phrases like "subrogation process" and "no guarantee of recovery" — which I kind of understand in theory, but it still feels completely backwards. I did nothing wrong and I'm being penalized financially for it.

Has anyone else dealt with this? Did you ever actually get your deductible back, or did it just disappear into the void? And is there anything I can do to push back, or do I just have to accept this and hope for the best?

I'm already stressed about medical bills and missed work — the last thing I need is to also be fighting my own insurance company over money I shouldn't owe in the first place.

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9 replies

  • 22
    gentle-raven-487

    A few things to look into: first, check your policy for an "uninsured/underinsured" or waiver provision — some policies actually waive the deductible in not-at-fault situations, depending on how it's written. Second, if subrogation is successful your insurer is legally required to return your deductible portion to you first before they keep their own recovery. That part they don't always volunteer upfront.

    • 8
      gentle-neighbor710

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

  • 19
    gentle-crow-873

    Not legal advice, but worth knowing: you may have the option to pursue the at-fault driver's insurance directly rather than going through your own carrier. If their liability coverage is straightforward, their insurer should be paying for your repairs and your deductible is a non-issue. Sometimes going through your own insurance feels faster but creates exactly the situation you're describing. Might be worth a conversation with someone who knows PI claims in your state.

    • 6
      steady-parent276

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 8
    curious-marmot-655

    Ugh, I went through almost this exact thing two years ago. Also rear-ended, also clearly not my fault. My insurance gave me the same subrogation speech. Honestly it took about four months but I did eventually get my deductible refunded once they recovered from the other side. The waiting is the worst part. Keep every piece of correspondence and follow up monthly — squeaky wheel and all that.

  • 8
    sharp-newt-905

    That phrase "no guarantee of recovery" is doing a lot of heavy lifting for them. They're framing it like your problem when really subrogation is their job to pursue. Don't just accept that answer passively. Ask them in writing what specific steps they're taking to recover from the at-fault party and what the timeline looks like. Get it documented.

    • 9
      bold-finch-456

      Former adjuster here — this is actually pretty standard procedure, unfortunately. When the at-fault driver has coverage that's harder to collect from quickly, your own carrier pays out first and then pursues recovery. The deductible refund gets returned to you if and when subrogation is successful. The frustrating truth is it can take anywhere from a few weeks to over a year depending on how cooperative the other side is. It doesn't mean you're stuck forever, just stuck waiting.

    • 16
      sharp-crow-302

      Go after the at-fault driver's insurance directly. Open a third-party claim with their carrier today if you haven't already. Your own insurance is the backup, not your only option. Stop waiting on your insurer to solve a problem that isn't technically yours.

    • 16
      brave-owl-203

      This is so unfair and I'm sorry you're dealing with it on top of the physical stuff. You did everything right and you're still getting the runaround. Please don't just let them brush you off — you deserve to have this made whole.