The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancebright-kestrel-150

Other driver's insurance agent is calling me — what do I say? I've never dealt with this before

So a few weeks ago I was waiting in a slow-moving line at a busy warehouse store fuel station. The car ahead of me rolled backward and tapped my front end. It wasn't a dramatic crash at all — more of a slow crunch — but there was enough contact to scuff the bumper cover and nick the lower part of my hood. Small area, but my car is a solid color with a pearl finish and the body shop said blending and clear coat on that section isn't cheap.

The other driver — a really polite older gentleman, probably mid-to-late 70s — didn't deny anything when I pointed it out. We kept it civil and exchanged contact info. He offered to just handle it privately rather than go through insurance, which honestly seemed fine to me at the time. We had a little back-and-forth over email about getting a repair quote.

Well, I got the quote and he was surprised by the number. Now he's looped in his insurance agent and told me to expect a call. I haven't touched my own insurance yet because I wasn't planning to file anything on my end.

Here's where I'm lost:

  • Do I have to talk to his agent? Can they record the call without asking me?
  • Is there anything I shouldn't say?
  • Should I call my own insurance first even if I'm not making a claim?
  • Part of me wonders if I should just eat some of the cost and get a cheaper touch-up instead of the full repair

I really don't want to accidentally say something that messes this up. I have the email thread proving we agreed he'd cover it, which feels important. Any advice from people who've been through something like this would be huge.

8replies

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8 replies

  • 20
    wise-owl-312

    Did you file a police report or get any kind of official documentation at the scene? And when you say he 'didn't deny it' — was that in writing anywhere or just verbal? I ask because if the adjuster decides to dispute fault, verbal-only agreements get murky fast. The email helps but I'd want to know exactly what it says.

  • 17
    wise-heron-765

    The email chain is really your strongest asset here. If it clearly shows he acknowledged responsibility and agreed to pay for repairs, that's essentially a written admission. I'd save every message, timestamp and all, before doing anything else. If the other insurer tries to lowball or dispute liability, that paper trail changes the conversation significantly.

  • 17
    calm-wolf-155

    Call your own insurance today. Not to file a claim — just to notify them and ask for guidance. That's literally what you pay them for. They deal with other carriers' adjusters all the time and can tell you in five minutes what you should and shouldn't say. Stop stressing and just make that call first.

  • 13
    bold-crow-728

    Former claims rep here. A few things worth knowing from the inside:

    1. Yes, they will almost certainly ask to record the call. You can decline or ask for questions in writing instead. Some adjusters push back but you have every right. 2. That email thread you mentioned? Keep it. Screenshot it, forward it somewhere safe. A written acknowledgment that he agreed to cover the repair is genuinely valuable if this gets disputed. 3. Your own policy likely has a 'duty to notify' clause but most carriers won't penalize you for reporting something you're not claiming — they just want to know. Call them, explain, ask how they'd like you to handle the inbound call from the other carrier.

  • 13
    bold-hare-249

    Not legal advice, but a quick thought: you are under no obligation to give a recorded statement to the other party's insurance company. Being cooperative is fine but cooperating doesn't mean agreeing to be recorded on their terms. Given that you have written documentation of the agreement, it might be worth a free consultation with a PI attorney before that call — just so you know exactly where you stand. Many do quick free calls.

  • 12
    kind-lynx-669

    I went through almost the exact same thing after a parking lot bump — the other guy went to his insurance after we'd already agreed to handle it directly. The agent called me within a day and was super friendly but definitely asking leading questions. My biggest regret was not talking to my own insurer first. They actually coached me on what to say and it made the call way less stressful. Do that before you pick up.

    • 12
      steady-newt-180

      The agent calling you is not your friend, full stop. They work for the other driver's insurance company, whose entire job is to minimize what they pay out. 'Friendly and helpful' is the vibe they go for, but everything you say gets written into a claim note. Don't accept a recorded statement without thinking it through first — you're not legally required to give one to his insurer.

  • 9
    silent-vole-554

    Ugh, this sounds so stressful especially when you tried to do the right thing and keep it simple. The fact that you have emails is such a relief to read — at least there's proof of what was agreed. Please don't just settle for a cheap touch-up to make it easier on him. You didn't cause this.