The Shoulder
The Shoulder
67
Insurancesilent-swan-673

Other driver backed into me in a parking lot — their insurance stalling. Fix it now or wait?

So this happened about two weeks ago and I'm still stuck in limbo, hoping someone here has dealt with something similar.

I was completely stopped in a grocery store parking lot, waiting for a spot to open up. A truck in the space started reversing and just... kept coming. I honked twice, he didn't stop, and he clipped my front passenger side pretty good. When we got out he was apologetic, said his backup camera "must have glitched" and he didn't hear me. We swapped info and I took a bunch of photos on my phone. No police report — honestly didn't think it would turn into this.

I filed against his insurance right away. The adjuster told me they have up to 30 days to "complete their investigation" before accepting or denying liability. Meanwhile I only carry liability on my own policy, so I can't just run it through mine and get a rental covered.

I got an estimate from a local shop — damage is real and it's not cheap. The adjuster basically said I can go ahead and get it repaired anywhere I want, and if they accept liability later I can submit receipts for "consideration." That word — consideration — is making me nervous.

My questions:

  • Has anyone paid out of pocket and then successfully gotten reimbursed? Or did the insurance company find some reason not to pay the full amount?
  • Is there a risk they come back and say "you should have used one of our preferred shops"?
  • Should I be documenting anything specific before I authorize repairs?

I need my car for work and I genuinely can't afford to wait this out indefinitely, but I also can't afford to eat thousands of dollars if they decide to lowball me or deny liability altogether. Any real-world experience here would really help.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 17
    humble-finch-442

    Went through almost the exact same thing last year — stopped car, someone reversed into me, no police report. I went ahead and got the car fixed because I needed it, kept every single receipt and photo I had. When they finally accepted liability about three weeks later they reimbursed me but they came back and said one part of the repair wasn't "related to the loss" and tried to knock some off. I pushed back with my before/after photos and eventually got the full amount. Moral: document EVERYTHING before the shop touches it.

    • 1
      gentle-neighbor656

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

  • 17
    swift-marmot-564

    That word "consideration" is doing a lot of heavy lifting and it's 100% intentional. Adjusters are trained to use language that sounds promising without actually committing to anything. If you get it fixed before they accept liability, they can use that as leverage — suddenly they want to dispute which damage was "pre-existing" or argue your shop overcharged. I'm not saying don't fix it, just go in with your eyes open and get as thorough a damage documentation as possible before any work starts.

    • 13
      bold-wolf-144

      You actually have more going for you than it might feel like right now. You have photos, a written estimate, and you filed promptly. A lot of people don't do those things and it really hurts them later. The waiting is miserable but you're not starting from a bad position here.

  • 23
    silent-kestrel-376

    I used to work on the inside and I'll tell you honestly — the "30 days to investigate" window is real but it's also sometimes used to see if claimants just get frustrated and go away or settle for less. The preferred shop thing is mostly a myth when it comes to liability claims on someone else's policy; they can't really force you to use their network in that situation. What they CAN do is dispute the labor rate if your shop charges more than what they consider "reasonable and customary" in your area. Get a second estimate if you can, just to show market range.

  • 21
    hearty-stoat-253

    A few practical things worth doing right now regardless of when you fix the car:

    1. Send the adjuster an email (not just a phone call) summarizing everything they told you about fixing it anywhere and submitting receipts. You want that in writing. 2. Ask them directly in writing whether using a non-network shop will affect reimbursement. 3. Have the shop do a written pre-repair inspection with photos attached to the estimate — some shops do this automatically, some you have to ask.

    Not legal advice, just stuff that tends to matter if this ever gets disputed.

  • 14
    hearty-bison-923

    Here's the blunt version: if you need the car, fix the car. Just don't let the shop start work until you have your own thorough photo documentation — every angle, close-ups of every scratch and dent, and ideally a video walkthrough. Once metal gets straightened you lose your evidence. After that, get everything in writing from the shop and keep copies of every invoice.

    • 4
      steady-neighbor846

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 6
    swift-mole-757

    Off the car stuff for a second — did you get checked out after the impact? Even low-speed parking lot hits can do weird things to your neck and shoulders that don't show up until a few days later. If anything starts aching, don't brush it off. Getting it documented medically early matters a lot if symptoms linger.

  • 14
    spry-marten-453

    Quick question — did you actually get anything from his insurance in writing confirming what the adjuster told you about submitting receipts? Because verbal promises from adjusters have a way of getting "misremembered" later. Also, do you know for sure the other driver has active coverage? Sometimes people give you an insurance card and it turns out the policy lapsed.

    • 3
      soft-spoken-overpass125

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

  • 21
    quick-sparrow-768

    Not legal advice, but one thing worth knowing: in most states, the at-fault party's insurance owes you the reasonable cost of repairs and a rental or loss-of-use compensation for the time your car was out of service — even if you didn't actually rent a car. So document how many days your car was undrivable either way. If this drags on or they deny liability despite clear facts, a free consult with a PI attorney costs you nothing and can clarify your options quickly.