The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsbrave-vole-164

Parking lot backing accident and now they're blaming ME?? Need help

This whole situation has me so frustrated I don't even know where to start.

So I'm cruising through a parking lot aisle — slowly, like normal — waiting behind another car that was sitting there looking for a spot. Once that car finally pulled into a space, I just continued straight ahead. Out of nowhere, a car shoots out of a spot on my left, reversing hard and fast. I swerved to try to avoid a full-on collision and we still ended up making contact — their rear corner clipped my front end. There's a small crunch in my bumper and some paint transfer. Not catastrophic, but definitely not nothing.

Here's where it gets wild. The other driver is now telling their insurance company that I was speeding through the lot and that's why the accident happened. Like... I was in a parking aisle. There was literally a car in front of me two seconds before. Where exactly was I supposed to be speeding to??

Their insurer called me yesterday doing this whole friendly routine, asking me to "just walk them through what happened." I gave a basic statement but now I'm second-guessing whether I should've said anything at all.

No injuries thankfully, but my car needs work and I don't want to get stuck paying for this when I didn't do anything wrong. Has anyone dealt with a he-said-she-said parking lot situation like this? How did it shake out for you? Any parking lot cameras I should be trying to track down, or is that even worth it?

9replies

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9 replies

  • 7
    daring-grouse-851

    Ugh, I went through almost the exact same thing last year. Different parking lot, same blame game. The person reversing always has the greater duty to yield — they can't see as well and they're the ones entering a travel lane. I ended up getting a copy of the parking lot's security footage and it completely backed up my version of events. Seriously, go ask whoever manages that lot ASAP because those recordings usually get overwritten within a week or two.

    • 21
      tidy-dove-025

      A couple practical things: First, file a claim with YOUR own insurer even if you think the other side should pay. They can advocate on your behalf and go after the other driver's carrier. Second, that camera footage point is huge — approach the property manager, explain there was an incident, and ask them to preserve the footage in writing (even a text works). If you wait too long it's just gone and you lose your strongest evidence.

    • 8
      tired-passenger861

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 19
    keen-tern-107

    Please stop talking to their insurance company. I cannot stress this enough. That "friendly walk me through it" call is literally a tactic to get you to say something that sounds like you were moving faster than you should have been. Even saying something like "I accelerated to get out of the way" can be twisted. Anything you say to the other driver's insurer can and will be used to reduce or deny your claim.

  • 10
    warm-wren-399

    Former adjuster here. In parking lot accidents, we'd typically look at a few things: which vehicle was in a defined travel lane vs. which one was backing out of a stall, any witness statements, and of course camera footage if available. The backing driver almost always carries the majority of fault because they're supposed to yield before reversing into traffic. That said, adjusters absolutely will try to assign you some percentage of comparative fault if they can find any hook — even a minor one — to reduce the payout. Document everything now. Photos, diagram of the lot, names of anyone who saw it.

  • 7
    wise-lynx-518

    Not legal advice, but just so you know — in most states, a driver reversing out of a parking space has a legal duty to ensure the path is clear before and during the entire reversing maneuver. Simply being in a travel aisle moving forward generally puts you in the right-of-way position. That doesn't mean fault is always 100/0, but it's a meaningful legal distinction. If their insurer keeps pushing back or tries to put significant fault on you, it may be worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney.

    • 20
      quick-swan-353

      Three things: Stop talking to their insurance without knowing your rights. Get that camera footage before it's gone. And write down everything you remember about the accident RIGHT NOW — speed you were going, what the lot looked like, where the other car came from, all of it — while it's fresh. Details fade fast and you'll want your own clear account if this becomes a dispute.

  • 7
    wise-badger-497

    This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that they're already trying to flip the blame on you is a red flag that they know they're in the wrong. Just make sure you don't let them bully you into accepting fault you don't deserve. Trust your gut on what happened — you were there.

  • 22
    clever-mole-227

    Were there any witnesses around? Anyone walking to their car, other drivers nearby? And how fast do you think you actually were going — like genuinely? I'm not saying you're wrong, just that if this goes to a dispute the details are going to matter a lot. A parking lot aisle is maybe 10-15 mph max in most people's minds, so if you were in that range you're probably fine, but I'd think carefully before you describe your speed to anyone.