The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
bold-wren-364

Other driver's insurer wants to split fault 50/50 — will this tank my rates if I just accept it?

So this happened in a parking garage last week. Both of us were pulling out of spaces on opposite sides of the lane at basically the same time, but honestly he came flying out without even pausing and clipped my front bumper pretty good. No cameras in that part of the garage, no one else around. Just his word vs mine.

His insurance did a quick investigation and came back with a 50/50 comparative fault decision. I'm not thrilled about it but I kind of get why — there's zero evidence either way and it's basically a he-said-she-said situation. The damage to my car is real though, and I'm still a little sore in my neck from the jolt.

Here's where I'm confused: if I just accept the 50/50 split and let his insurance pay out their half, does that count as me filing a claim on MY policy? Because I really don't want my own premiums jumping over something that wasn't my fault.

A few things swirling in my head:

  • Would accepting the partial payout show up on my insurance history?
  • Is it better to just eat the repair cost out of pocket and not touch insurance at all?
  • Does 50/50 fault follow me even if I never file on my own side?

I'm not trying to fight a big legal battle over a fender bender, I just don't want to be penalized for years because some guy couldn't be bothered to look before backing out. If anyone's been through something similar I'd really appreciate knowing how it played out for you.

10replies

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

10 replies

  • 10
    cool-vole-943

    So here's the thing a lot of people don't realize — when the OTHER driver's insurance pays you directly as a third-party claimant, that transaction generally doesn't go through your own policy at all. Your insurer doesn't file anything, no claim opens on your side, and in most cases there's nothing to trigger a rate review. Where it gets murkier is if a 50/50 determination gets reported to a shared industry database (like CLUE), which can sometimes be visible when you switch carriers or renew. I'd honestly call your own insurer's customer service line — not the claims department — and just ask hypothetically what would happen if you received a partial third-party payout. They'll usually tell you straight.

  • 15
    clear-hare-476

    Be really careful here. Adjusters love parking lot claims for 50/50 splits because it's an easy way to reduce what they owe you. Doesn't mean it's fair or even accurate — it just means it's convenient for them. Don't assume 50/50 is the final word just because they said so quickly.

    • 8
      level-overpass550

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

  • 16
    spry-vole-884

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me in a shopping center a while back. I took the 50/50 payout from the other guy's insurance and never opened a claim with my own company. My rates didn't budge at renewal. Can't promise that's universal but it worked out fine for me. The neck soreness though — please don't ignore that. Mine turned into something that needed physical therapy weeks later and I wish I had documented it from day one.

  • 16
    silent-wolf-881

    That neck soreness after a jolt, even a low-speed one, is worth getting checked out sooner rather than later. Soft tissue stuff can feel minor for a few days and then really flare up. If you end up needing treatment later it's a lot harder to connect it back to the accident if you never saw a doctor at the time. At minimum get it documented.

    • 18
      brave-swift-991

      Two separate questions here that people are mixing up: (1) will accepting the payout raise your rates — probably not if it stays on the other driver's policy. (2) should you accept 50/50 — that's the real question, and it depends on whether you're also trying to recover for your physical symptoms or just the car. Don't let the rate worry rush you into settling before you know how your neck is doing.

    • 0
      careful-rider416

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

  • 12
    tidy-wren-750

    From a process standpoint — accepting a third-party settlement from the at-fault driver's insurer typically means signing a release, so read that carefully before you sign anything. Some releases are very broad and could close the door on any future medical claims related to the same incident. If that neck soreness turns into something real, you'd want to know exactly what you signed away. Might be worth having someone with legal knowledge take a quick look at any paperwork before you accept.

  • 11
    quiet-marmot-393

    Not legal advice, but the 50/50 split isn't necessarily set in stone just because they offered it. Insurers make initial determinations based on limited info and sometimes revise them if you push back with anything new. Also, if your injury symptoms develop further, the value of your claim changes — and a signed release could prevent you from coming back for more. Worth at least a free consult before you close this out. Most PI attorneys don't charge for an initial call.

  • 10
    wise-bison-502

    Quick question — did you get any kind of medical eval after the crash or just went home? Because if you're only talking about property damage and you feel fine, the math on 50/50 might actually work out okay for you. But if there's a real injury in the mix, that changes things a lot and I'd slow way down before signing anything.