The Shoulder
The Shoulder
50
Insurancehumble-fox-478

Other driver's insurance said they'd cover everything — now flipping it on me??

I'm genuinely so confused right now and could use some outside perspective.

About three weeks ago I was driving through an intersection when a car pulled out of a strip mall parking lot and cut directly across my lane without warning. I had maybe a second to react — I braked hard and steered to avoid a direct hit but still caught the back corner of their car. My car had to be towed. Theirs drove away.

Police came. No ticket was issued to either of us. I gave my statement, took photos of everything, got the other driver's info.

Here's where it gets weird: the other driver's insurance contacted me within a week, said their insured was at fault, and started moving forward on my repairs. I got a rental, the shop had my car, everything seemed like it was actually going okay for once.

Then yesterday — literally the day before my car is supposed to be ready — I get a call saying they've "completed their investigation" and now they're saying I bear primary liability. Just like that. No real explanation. The rep was vague and kind of robotic about it.

I have no idea what changed. I didn't get a ticket. The damage on my car is consistent with exactly what I described — hard braking, front end impact. I have photos and a video I took at the scene.

Do insurance companies just... do this? Flip the liability determination at the last minute like it's nothing? Should I be panicking? I haven't contacted my own insurance yet because I honestly didn't think I needed to at this point.

Any advice or shared experience would really help right now. I'm freaking out a little.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 14
    spry-seal-903

    I worked in claims for years and I'll tell you exactly what probably happened: somebody higher up reviewed the file, didn't like the exposure, and pushed back on the original liability decision. It happens more than people think, especially if repair costs are climbing. The first rep may have jumped the gun calling fault on their insured. That doesn't mean they're right to flip it — it just means someone with more authority got involved. Your photos and that video are really important right now. Don't share anything new with them without thinking it through.

    • 21
      careful-wolf-132

      Call your own insurance today, not tomorrow. I know it feels counterintuitive when you think you're not at fault, but your policy has provisions for exactly this situation — including uninsured/underinsured and collision coverage that can step in while fault gets sorted out. Your insurer also has an incentive to fight the other side on your behalf. Also, if you haven't already, write down everything you remember about the accident in as much detail as possible — sequence of events, road conditions, what the other driver said at the scene. Memory fades fast and you'll want that record.

  • 14
    bright-marmot-176

    Have you been checked out medically? I know you're focused on the car situation right now but hard braking impacts can cause soft tissue stuff that doesn't always show up immediately — neck, back, shoulders. If you start feeling anything, please go get seen and make sure it's documented. Injuries that show up days later are still real injuries and you don't want to have settled the property damage before anyone knows you're actually hurt.

    • 9
      weary-dreamer948

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 13
    wise-swan-162

    This happened to me almost exactly. Other driver's insurance was super friendly at first, then about two weeks in they did a complete 180. I didn't have a lawyer and ended up getting pressured into a settlement through my own insurance that I honestly think was way less than it should've been. If I could go back I would've talked to an attorney the moment they started getting weird. Learn from my mistake.

    • 6
      candid-heron-558

      Stop talking to the other driver's insurance without knowing your rights. Seriously. Every conversation you have with them right now can be used to build their case against you. Call your own insurer, tell them what happened, and let them deal with it. That's literally what you pay premiums for.

  • 12
    humble-marmot-820

    Not legal advice, but this pattern — initial acceptance of liability followed by a last-minute reversal — is something attorneys who handle these cases see regularly. The fact that no citation was issued and that you have photographic evidence of the damage placement is potentially significant. It might be worth at least a free consultation with a personal injury attorney before you say anything else to either insurance company. Most won't charge you unless they recover something. Just a thought.

    • 3
      curious-passenger771

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

    • 0
      level-sidewalk181

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 12
    keen-lynx-515

    What exactly did the other driver's insurance say their reason was for changing the determination? Like did they mention a witness, new footage, a statement from their insured — anything specific? I ask because sometimes there actually is a new piece of information and sometimes it's just bluster. Knowing why they flipped would help figure out what you're actually dealing with.

  • 11
    hearty-tern-392

    Yes they absolutely do this, and it's not an accident. They strung you along, got you comfortable, let the repair process move forward — and now they flip it right when you're most relieved and off guard. It's a pressure tactic. They're hoping you'll just accept it and go through your own insurance so they can close the file. Don't give them that satisfaction without a fight.

    • 16
      steady-fox-810

      Ugh, I'm so sorry. You did everything right — you stayed, you talked to the police, you documented everything — and now this. That's just awful. Please don't try to handle this alone. Even just talking to someone who knows how this process works could make a huge difference. You shouldn't have to figure this out by yourself.

    • 3
      steady-wanderer899

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.