The Shoulder
The Shoulder
51
silent-wolf-419

Other driver's insurer has been 'investigating' for 4 months and won't return my calls

I'm honestly at my wit's end here and hoping someone has been through something similar.

Back in the spring I got rear-ended at a red light — total textbook not-my-fault situation. The other driver got cited on the spot and never disputed anything. My car took a solid hit to the rear end; not totaled, but definitely not driveable without repairs.

I only carry liability on my own policy, so my insurer pointed me straight to the at-fault driver's insurance company to handle the property damage claim. At first they seemed responsive — had me upload photos, asked for my repair estimate, the usual. Then... silence.

Every time I finally get someone on the phone they say something vague like "we're still looking into the coverage situation" or "the investigation is ongoing." Apparently there's some question about whether the driver was actually covered under that policy. But nobody will explain what that actually means for me or give me any kind of timeline.

It's been four months. My car is sitting at a body shop racking up storage fees. I've had to bum rides and rent a car out of pocket because I can't afford to just wait forever.

I reached out to a couple of local attorneys and they both said they mainly handle injury cases and couldn't help with a pure property damage situation. My own insurance rep tried calling them too and got the same runaround I did.

Does anyone know:

  • Is there a way to force the insurance company to actually respond?
  • Are there attorneys who specifically deal with property damage only?
  • Should I be filing a complaint somewhere?

I'm in the Southeast if that matters. Really just need to know I'm not completely stuck.

11replies

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

11 replies

  • 7
    warm-swan-947

    I used to work claims and I can tell you exactly what "investigating coverage" usually means — they're trying to figure out if they can deny the claim entirely because the driver wasn't listed or excluded on the policy. They will drag this out as long as possible because an open investigation costs them nothing. The moment they formally deny, the clock starts on YOUR options. Push them to give you a written coverage decision. Don't let them keep you in limbo indefinitely.

  • 5
    gentle-wren-016

    Four months with no resolution is not normal — it's a stall tactic. They're hoping you'll either give up or make a mistake. Stop calling and start putting everything in writing, email only. That way there's a paper trail if this ever goes anywhere. And document every single storage fee and rental car receipt. Every. Single. One.

  • 9
    mellow-elk-285

    A few things worth knowing: most states have a department of insurance that handles consumer complaints, and filing one is free. Insurers are actually required to respond to those within a set timeframe — it lights a fire under them in a way that phone calls just don't. Also look up your state's "unfair claims practices" statute. Unreasonable delay in investigating a claim can be a violation. You don't necessarily need an attorney to file that complaint, but it can move things faster than anything else you've tried.

  • 10
    spry-sparrow-318

    Not legal advice, but I'd push back gently on the idea that no attorney will touch this. Some personal injury attorneys will handle property damage claims, especially if the delay has caused consequential losses like storage fees and rental costs that have stacked up. The value of the claim matters to them, obviously, but four months of extras can add up. Worth a few more consultations. Also — if the driver truly wasn't covered, you may have options under your own uninsured motorist property damage coverage depending on your state. Check your declarations page.

    • 10
      warm-bison-878

      This kind of prolonged stress is genuinely hard on people — I see it all the time. Even when there's no physical injury, the financial anxiety and the feeling of powerlessness from being jerked around takes a real toll. Make sure you're not letting this consume your mental energy 24/7. Take the practical steps people are suggesting here, then try to set it down until there's something to respond to. You deserve to not be carrying this constantly.

  • 12
    brave-crow-603

    Went through something almost identical last year. Different state, same runaround. What finally broke it loose for me was filing a complaint with the state insurance commissioner AND sending a certified letter directly to the claims department (not the adjuster, but their supervisor) stating I intended to pursue all available legal remedies if I didn't receive a coverage decision within 15 days. Got a call within a week. Sometimes you just have to make noise in writing.

  • 20
    silent-swan-901

    Stop waiting for them to come to you. File the state insurance complaint today — it takes maybe 20 minutes online. Also call your own insurer back and specifically ask whether you have uninsured motorist property damage on your policy. A lot of people don't realize they have it. And get those storage fees in writing from the shop — that's leverage.

    • 9
      kind-traveler232

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 14
    hearty-beaver-640

    Quick question — did you actually confirm in writing that the at-fault driver was cited and accepted it? Sometimes tickets get contested later and it muddies the liability picture. Also, has your own insurer formally told you they won't handle this under any of your coverages, or did they just redirect you to the other carrier? Those answers change what your options actually are.

  • 18
    quick-swan-464

    Ugh, I'm so sorry. The fact that you're paying storage fees and renting a car while they just sit on their hands is infuriating. You did everything right and you're the one suffering for it. I really hope the complaint route works — you deserve an actual answer, not just endless "we're looking into it."

    • 7
      steady-parent744

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