The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
Insurancewarm-wren-726

Other driver's insurance went completely silent after I sent everything they asked for — normal??

I feel like I'm losing my mind a little bit. Back in the spring I filed a claim against the other driver's liability insurance (he ran a red light, hit me on the passenger side — not subtle). The adjuster I was assigned actually seemed helpful at first. She confirmed in writing that their insured was fully at fault and told me exactly what to send over: my medical records, the bills, photos, the whole package.

So I did. I spent two weeks pulling everything together, got my doctor's office to release records, organized it all into a PDF, and sent it through their online portal just like she asked.

That was almost three months ago.

Since then? Nothing. I've called the direct line she gave me probably a dozen times. Voicemail every single time. I've left messages. I've used the portal's messaging feature. I even sent an old-fashioned email. One auto-reply and then silence.

I called the main claims number twice and both times the rep just said "your adjuster will be in touch." When I pushed, one of them said she might have a heavy caseload. Cool, but I'm sitting here with mounting medical bills and zero clarity on where this is going.

I'm not trying to be unreasonable — I know these things take time. But three months of total radio silence after they already admitted fault feels wrong. Has anyone dealt with this? Did you eventually hear back on your own, or did you need outside help to get them moving? Really just trying to understand what's normal here.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 18
    quick-beaver-263

    Oh this is painfully familiar. The exact same thing happened to me — adjuster was all smiles until I submitted my documents, then it was like she fell off the earth. What finally broke the silence for me was sending a formal written letter (actual mail, certified) to the claims department addressed to her supervisor. Something about a paper trail they had to sign for made things move. Not saying it'll work for you but it got a response within a week after months of nothing.

  • 17
    mellow-swan-895

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this on top of recovering from the actual accident. The fact that you did everything right and are still getting stonewalled is infuriating. Please don't just keep waiting — you deserve answers and you deserve to not be stressed about bills that aren't your fault. Rooting for you.

  • 16
    silent-marmot-374

    Not legal advice, but the situation you're describing — admitted liability, complete documentation submitted, months of no response — is exactly the kind of thing where having an attorney send a letter on your behalf can change the dynamic immediately. Insurance companies tend to respond differently when they know someone is represented. Most PI attorneys do free consults, so it's worth at least a conversation to understand your options.

    • 8
      level-mile-marker928

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

  • 15
    curious-marmot-463

    Stop calling and leaving voicemails — they're easy to ignore. Send everything in writing via certified mail to both the adjuster AND the claims department supervisor. State clearly that you submitted a complete package on X date, you have received no response, and you expect written communication within 14 days. Give them a deadline. Then if you get nothing, file the state insurance complaint. That's your move.

    • 7
      steady-commuter893

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 13
    genuine-newt-015

    Please don't let the insurance limbo cause you to delay or skip any follow-up care. I see patients do that all the time — they put off PT or specialist visits because they're waiting to see what insurance covers, and it ends up hurting their recovery AND their claim. Keep going to your appointments and keep every receipt and summary. Your health comes first.

  • 10
    patient-badger-022

    I'll be honest with you — I used to work claims and caseloads are genuinely brutal sometimes, so a little delay isn't always bad faith. BUT three months with zero response after a complete submission and a liability admission? That's not a backlog issue, that's a file sitting untouched. Escalate in writing directly to the claims manager, not just the adjuster. Use the word 'escalation' in your message. Files that get escalated get touched.

    • 7
      calm-dreamer784

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 10
    tidy-badger-508

    A few practical things worth knowing: most states have regulations requiring insurers to acknowledge and act on claims within specific timeframes — usually somewhere between 15 and 45 days depending on where you live. If they've blown past those windows, that's potentially a bad faith issue, not just poor customer service. You can also file a complaint with your state's Department of Insurance, which sometimes lights a fire under adjusters faster than anything else. It's free and takes about 20 minutes online.

  • 9
    daring-tern-519

    This is a known tactic. They confirmed liability, so they know they owe you something — the silence is them hoping you get frustrated, desperate, or just accept less than you deserve. Every week that goes by while you're stressed about bills is a week that works in their favor psychologically. Don't let them wait you out.

    • 6
      plainspoken-late-shift143

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