The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
Insurancesteady-stoat-790

Other driver's insurance denying claim over unpaid premiums — can they even do that?

So we got rear-ended pretty badly about three weeks ago at a busy intersection. The other driver was clearly at fault — there's a traffic cam that caught the whole thing. We exchanged info at the scene and I figured it would be a straightforward claim against his liability coverage.

Here's where it gets messy. His insurance company is now telling me they won't cover our damages because he allegedly missed premium payments and his policy was "not in good standing" at the time of the crash. But the insurance card he handed me at the scene shows a policy expiration date that's still over a year away. How is that even legal?

On top of that, the shop we trust — the one that has experience with our specific make and has done right by us before — is saying some of the structural components need to be ordered and it'll take a few extra weeks. The other driver's insurer is pushing us toward one of their "preferred" shops, which honestly gives me a bad feeling. The damage is significant enough that I don't want corners cut.

Our own policy has collision coverage so we could go through our own insurer and let them subrogate, but I'm worried about my rates going up even though this wasn't my fault.

Has anyone dealt with an at-fault driver's insurance backing out over a payment dispute like this? Should we just pay out of pocket for our preferred shop and then sue the driver directly? Or is there another path here?

Really stressed and could use some guidance from people who've been through something similar. 😔

12replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

12 replies

  • 17
    brave-seal-237

    That "missed payment" excuse is a classic dodge. Insurers know most people won't push back hard, so they throw up whatever wall they can early on. Get that denial in writing — the specific reason, the policy number, everything. Don't just accept a verbal "we're not covering it." A written denial is your ammunition.

    • 17
      tidy-badger-756

      I used to work claims and honestly this situation is more complicated than adjusters let on at first contact. Whether a policy is actually void due to non-payment depends heavily on whether proper cancellation notices were sent to the policyholder — there are legally required steps before a carrier can cancel mid-term. If those notices weren't issued correctly, the policy may still be valid regardless of what they're telling you. Push them to show proof of cancellation notice with dates. That card he handed you at the scene is also meaningful documentation.

    • 7
      soft-spoken-overpass584

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 20
    silent-finch-207

    From a process standpoint: file a complaint with your state's Department of Insurance if they deny without giving you a clear documented reason. DOI complaints get insurers' attention fast because regulators take bad-faith practices seriously. Also, your own collision coverage with subrogation is often the cleanest path to getting your car fixed quickly — your insurer fights them, not you. Your rates shouldn't increase on a not-at-fault claim but double-check your policy language or ask your agent directly.

  • 12
    candid-lynx-461

    Not legal advice, but this scenario — an insurer denying a third-party claim based on alleged policyholder non-payment — is something worth having an actual PI attorney review. Many work on contingency for situations exactly like this. The question of whether the cancellation was legally valid is fact-specific and honestly an attorney can often get insurers to reverse course just by showing up. A free consult costs you nothing.

    • 1
      kind-survivor390

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

  • 18
    candid-badger-973

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me two years ago. At-fault driver, sketchy insurance situation, carrier trying to wriggle out. I went through my own insurance, they fixed my car, and then their subrogation team went after the other driver's insurer. Took about four months but I got my deductible back. It's annoying but it works. Don't wait around hoping the other insurer does the right thing — they won't.

    • 3
      calm-traveler502

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

  • 14
    candid-kestrel-628

    Do NOT let them steer you to their preferred shop on a hit this big. Preferred shops are cheaper for them, not better for you. Get your own estimate from the shop you trust, document everything with photos, and keep every receipt. If you end up in small claims or civil court against the driver, that paper trail is everything.

    • 13
      spry-wolf-889

      How are you physically doing? People get so caught up in the car and the insurance battle that they forget to actually get checked out. Structural impacts can cause soft tissue stuff that doesn't show up for days. If you haven't seen a doctor yet, please go — even just urgent care. And keep a note of any symptoms, sleep issues, headaches, etc. It matters if this escalates legally.

  • 10
    plain-dove-010

    This sounds so exhausting and stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. You did everything right — had insurance, exchanged info, got the camera footage. It's infuriating that someone else's mess is now your problem to untangle. Rooting for you to get this sorted. 💙

  • 18
    wise-owl-506

    Quick question — did you actually get a copy of the denial in writing yet, or are you going off what a phone rep told you? Because phone reps sometimes just say no reflexively before a claim is even formally reviewed. I'd make sure you've actually submitted a formal third-party claim and received a written coverage determination before assuming the door is fully closed.