The Shoulder
The Shoulder
52
Insurancehearty-tern-673

Parked car got hit while I was at work — no insurance yet. Am I just screwed?

I am genuinely sick to my stomach right now and need to talk to someone who gets it.

So I finally pulled the trigger on a used pickup last week — saved up forever for it, paid a fair chunk out of pocket. I'd been going back and forth on insurance quotes and just... hadn't finalized anything yet. Classic procrastination, I know, I know.

Went into my overnight shift, came out in the morning, and there's a nasty crunch along the rear quarter panel. No note. Nobody around. The lot I park in is shared between my workplace and a few other businesses nearby, so there's foot and vehicle traffic all night.

I asked around inside and nobody saw anything. One of my coworkers mentioned there might be a camera on the far side of the building but the facilities manager there has been super dismissive every time I bring it up — like I'm bothering him. It's starting to feel like I'm just going to eat this.

A few questions I keep spinning on:

  • Is there any realistic way to track down whoever did this without witnesses or clear footage?
  • Can I still file any kind of claim if I hadn't officially bound my policy yet?
  • If the damage is cosmetic-ish but significant, is it even worth pursuing legally or do I just find a cheap body shop?

I'm not trying to make a federal case out of it, I just don't want to silently absorb hundreds or thousands of dollars because some person couldn't be bothered to leave a note. Anyone been through something like this?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 21
    calm-finch-799

    Not legal advice, but the police report and written footage preservation request are genuinely your two most time-sensitive moves right now. Beyond that, some states have specific hit-and-run statutes that allow civil recovery even without identifying the driver — worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney to understand your state's rules. Most won't charge anything just to tell you if you have options.

  • 21
    clear-marten-714

    Quick question — when you say you 'hadn't finalized' the insurance, do you mean you had a quote in progress and just hadn't paid yet, or you genuinely had nothing at all? Because those are pretty different situations. Some carriers will backdate a policy by a day or two in certain circumstances (not saying they will, just asking). Also — is the damage actually cosmetic or could there be structural stuff underneath? That changes the math on whether it's worth pursuing.

    • 4
      careful-commuter801

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

  • 16
    brave-elk-124

    Ugh, this happened to me in a grocery store lot — brand new-to-me car, someone clipped the door panel and vanished. The camera angle that could've helped was pointed literally two feet the wrong direction. It's infuriating. Definitely push harder on the facilities manager, don't let one dismissive conversation be the end of it. Ask in writing so there's a paper trail.

    • 6
      steady-survivor615

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

  • 9
    curious-hare-056

    On the insurance question — be really careful here. If you hadn't officially bound a policy at the time of the incident, most carriers will deny any claim tied to it outright. Don't let anyone talk you into vague timelines or fudging when you 'started' coverage. Document everything about when you finalized the policy so it's crystal clear, because insurers will absolutely look for any reason to wriggle out.

  • 9
    swift-bison-528

    I'm so sorry this happened to you right after you finally got the truck. That's just awful timing and it's completely unfair. Please don't just quietly absorb this — at least go through the motions of documenting everything so future-you has options. You deserve to at least try.

  • 8
    genuine-marmot-561

    Not a legal angle but — are you okay? Stress like this, especially coming off an overnight shift with no sleep, can really mess with your judgment and health. Make sure you're not making big decisions exhausted. Write everything down while it's fresh, rest, then tackle the calls.

  • 7
    bright-badger-181

    Former claims person here. The hard truth is that unbound policies mean zero coverage for that loss — there's no gray area on that internally. What you can do is check whether your state has an uninsured motorist fund for hit-and-runs, because some do cover parked vehicle damage under certain conditions. It's not a sure thing but worth a phone call to your state's DMR or insurance commissioner's office. Also file a police report TODAY if you haven't — without one, almost every avenue closes faster.

  • 7
    keen-lynx-779

    Seconding the police report immediately. I know it feels pointless when you have no suspect, but that report number is what unlocks basically every next step — state funds, any future insurance claim, even small claims court if something turns up later. Also, formally request the security footage in writing (email is fine) and mention you're preserving it for a potential legal matter. That word alone sometimes gets facilities managers moving a lot faster. Footage gets overwritten on short cycles, so urgency matters here.

    • 19
      kind-vole-606

      Three things, in order: (1) file a police report today, (2) send a written request for that footage before it's gone, (3) get a body shop estimate so you actually know what you're dealing with before you decide whether to fight or absorb it. You can't make a smart call without knowing the real number.