The Shoulder
The Shoulder
50
Insuranceplain-marmot-358

Other driver just asked me to lie to insurance — now what do I do?

Still kind of shaken up writing this out. Had a fender-bender a few days ago on a surface street — traffic ahead of me bunched up fast, I stopped in time, but the car behind me rear-ended me. Both vehicles were still drivable, nobody looked seriously hurt at the scene.

Here's where it gets weird. The other driver was pretty young and got really flustered. She didn't want police involved at all. I wasn't totally sure of my rights so I went along with just exchanging insurance info and snapping photos. No official report filed.

Fast forward maybe five or six hours and I get a call from her. Turns out — and she admitted this herself — she doesn't actually have a valid license. She told me she had already given her insurance company a different story about who was driving. Then she straight-up asked me to back up her version of events if anyone called me.

I told her no. Not happening. I'm not putting my name on a lie for anybody.

But now I'm sitting here wondering: do I have any obligation to proactively tell my own insurance company what she told me? Like, does keeping quiet make ME look bad or get me in some kind of trouble later? I already reported the accident to my insurer the same day it happened, before any of this came out.

Also — is there anything else I should be doing right now to protect myself? I feel like I'm somehow getting pulled into her mess even though I didn't do anything wrong.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 16
    quiet-sparrow-956

    Yes, tell your insurance company. Call them today, not tomorrow. Just explain that after you filed your report you learned the other driver may not have had a valid license and that she asked you to corroborate a different story. Don't editorialize, just give them the facts. The longer you sit on information like this, the worse it looks for you if it surfaces later.

    • 16
      clever-lynx-805

      What she did — giving her insurance company a false account of who was driving — is insurance fraud. That's not a small thing. You're not responsible for her choices, but you absolutely should not let anyone think you're a willing participant. Looping in your insurer with an honest update protects you from being dragged into any fraud investigation later. Keep the texts or voicemails where she asked you to lie. Screenshot everything and back it up somewhere.

    • 7
      kind-owl-728

      Just want to check — are you actually doing okay physically? Rear-end hits have a way of sneaking up on you. Neck and upper back stiffness sometimes doesn't show up until 24-48 hours later. Even if you feel fine right now, it might be worth a visit to urgent care just to get it documented. If you wake up sore in two days and there's no medical record, it makes things harder.

    • 7
      grounded-co-pilot411

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

  • 8
    warm-stoat-282

    I'd be really careful here. Whatever you tell your own insurer, make sure you document that call too — write down the date, time, and the name of the rep you spoke with. Insurers sometimes use 'cooperation clauses' in your policy to pressure you, and you want a paper trail showing you were upfront about everything as soon as you knew.

  • 7
    gentle-marten-991

    Speaking from experience on the other side of the desk: adjusters cross-reference stories constantly. If her carrier calls yours and the accounts don't match, the first thing investigators look at is whether there was a coverage issue — like an unlicensed driver. If it comes out later that you knew and didn't mention it, it complicates your claim even though you did nothing wrong. Disclose it. You're not ratting anyone out, you're just being accurate about what you learned.

  • 20
    patient-grouse-419

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me after a parking lot accident. Different details but the other person also tried to pressure me to 'keep it simple' with the insurance companies. I told my insurer everything and honestly it was the right call — my claim went smoothly because my story never changed. Yours won't either if you just stay honest from the start.

    • 2
      honest-parent991

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

  • 8
    warm-heron-027

    Ugh, this makes me so angry on your behalf. You did everything right and now you're the one losing sleep over it. Please don't let her guilt trip you into doing something that could blow back on you. You already said no — stick to that.

  • 9
    quiet-tern-638

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking — knowingly staying silent about fraud that could affect your own claim can create problems depending on your state and your policy language. The safer move is always transparency with your own carrier. If you're worried about any blowback from this situation, a quick free consult with a PI attorney wouldn't hurt just to understand your position.

    • 6
      soft-spoken-overpass813

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 15
    candid-swift-173

    Did you actually get her insurance card at the scene, or just a photo of it? And did you file anything with the DMV or local PD afterward? Depending on your state, you might be required to self-report an accident above a certain damage threshold even without a police report. Worth looking into before this gets any more complicated.

    • 8
      calm-walker391

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