The Shoulder
The Shoulder
66
Car accidentsquick-sparrow-086

Offered to settle out of pocket after a fender bender — massively underestimated the damage. Now what?

So I kind of made a rookie mistake and I'm hoping someone here has been through something similar.

About two weeks ago a guy sideswiped me while merging — totally his fault, there's even a gas station camera that caught it. We pulled over, exchanged info, and honestly I just wanted to keep it simple. The damage looked minor at the time, so I texted him a few days later and said I'd settle privately for what I thought was a fair number — enough to cover what I figured was a small dent and some scraped paint.

He immediately started nitpicking. Said some of the damage looked "pre-existing" (it wasn't — I have photos from literally the week before showing a clean bumper). Then he tried to lowball me with an almost insultingly small counter-offer. That made me suspicious, so I finally took it to an actual body shop for a real estimate.

Yeah. The quote came back way higher than what I offered him. Apparently there's damage to the rear quarter panel underneath that you can't see, plus alignment issues. The shop said the visible stuff was just the tip of the iceberg.

Here's where I'm at: I gave him a deadline to accept my original offer, which hasn't passed yet. He hasn't accepted — he's still trying to grind me down to almost nothing. So technically he never agreed to my terms.

Can I just pull the offer off the table and go through insurance instead? Does the fact that I put a number in writing hurt me? I still have his insurance info. I haven't filed anything yet.

Really kicking myself for not just going straight to insurance from the start. Any advice from people who've been here?

16replies

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16 replies

  • 21
    keen-hare-464

    I used to work claims and honestly this private-settlement thing almost never works out for the person who got hit. The at-fault party has zero incentive to be fair when there's no insurer pushing them. Your original offer being in writing isn't great, but if he never formally accepted it — and lowballing you is NOT acceptance — you're almost certainly in the clear to walk away from it. File the claim. Let the adjusters sort it out. That's literally what the system is for.

    • 6
      soft-spoken-co-pilot585

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 18
    quiet-vole-249

    Also just checking — are you physically okay? Sideswipe impacts can do weird things to your neck and shoulder even when the hit feels minor. Sometimes symptoms show up days or even a week later. If you've had any stiffness, headaches, or soreness since the accident, please get checked out and make sure it's documented medically. Don't just focus on the car damage.

    • 0
      calm-neighbor857

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 17
    hearty-vole-413

    Ugh, I did almost the exact same thing after a parking lot incident. Tried to be nice and settle directly. The other person strung me along for three weeks and then ghosted me. By the time I went to insurance I was so stressed out. Just file it. You have the camera footage, you have the photos, you have the shop estimate. You're in a strong position — don't give that up trying to save this guy some hassle.

    • 9
      patient-traveler121

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

  • 15
    mellow-crane-794

    One thing I'd want to know: did you get the shop estimate in writing? And did you actually secure a copy of that camera footage or just confirm it exists? Because "I know there's footage" is very different from "I have the footage." Those are the two things I'd lock down before anything else, because if this drags out those become your lifelines.

  • 14
    clear-owl-109

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this — you were just trying to be a decent person and make it easy on everyone, and now you're the one scrambling. That's really unfair. I hope you get it sorted out quickly. Go with your gut and just use insurance. That's why we pay for it.

    • 4
      gentle-commuter940

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

  • 10
    wise-swift-422

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking — an offer you make is not a binding contract until the other party accepts it. If he's been counter-offering instead of accepting your terms, he likely hasn't formed an agreement with you. That means you may well be free to withdraw your offer and file through insurance instead. I'd do it before he suddenly decides to "accept" your original number now that he knows you've wised up. Seriously, don't wait.

  • 10
    steady-crane-757

    The moment you go to the other guy's insurer, watch how fast his story changes. Suddenly the damage was pre-existing, the merge was "mutual," whatever. Document everything you have right now — that gas station footage is gold. Get a copy of it ASAP before it gets overwritten. Those cameras usually only keep footage for 2-4 weeks.

    • 12
      quiet-beaver-745

      A couple of practical things to keep in mind: First, pull that gas station footage today if you haven't already — bring a USB drive and ask nicely, or have your insurer request it. Second, when you do file, give your adjuster the full timeline including the texts about private settlement. Hiding that could cause headaches later. It's not damning — people try to handle things privately all the time — but your insurer needs the whole picture to go after the other guy's policy.

    • 6
      hopeful-optimist663

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

    • 4
      mellow-road-soul813

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 7
    kind-kestrel-583

    Stop texting this guy. Seriously, every message is a potential problem. Go file with insurance today, forward them everything — photos, shop estimate, the footage location — and let it go. You're not obligated to keep negotiating with someone who offered you pocket change.

    • 5
      kind-optimist816

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.