The Shoulder
The Shoulder
47
quiet-mole-148

Passenger in my coworker's car, now stuck with a hospital bill she won't help with

Long story short — a few months ago my coworker offered me a ride home after a late shift. She ran a red light and we got clipped by another car. I'm the only one who got hurt (wrenched my shoulder pretty bad and hit my head on the window), and she walked away totally fine.

I went straight to the ER because my neck and shoulder were killing me. Turns out I had a mild concussion and a strained rotator cuff. After my own health insurance covered their portion, I'm still sitting on a bill that's way more than I can just absorb right now.

Here's the mess: my coworker has the bare minimum liability coverage on her car. She filed something with her insurer weeks ago but they've basically ghosted both of us. Meanwhile she's acting like this whole thing is an inconvenience to her — she hasn't offered to help, hasn't followed up with her insurance, nothing.

I feel so awkward because I still have to see this woman at work every day. I don't want to blow things up professionally, but I also can't just eat this bill.

Some questions swirling in my head:

  • Is her liability coverage supposed to cover me as a passenger?
  • Should I be talking to her insurance directly or does that cause problems?
  • Do I even need a lawyer for something like this or is that overkill?
  • What happens if her coverage isn't enough to cover everything?

I've never dealt with anything like this before. I'm not trying to sue my coworker or make drama — I just want my medical bills handled and my shoulder to stop hurting. Any advice from people who've been through something similar would really help. 😩

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

  • 6
    candid-badger-227

    I was a passenger in a friend's car when she rear-ended someone and I got hurt. Her liability coverage did cover me — that's literally what it's for. You're not suing your coworker personally, you're making a claim against her insurance policy. Big difference, and honestly most people don't realize that. Don't let the personal relationship stop you from pursuing what you're owed.

    • 11
      bold-newt-020

      Not legal advice, but — the awkwardness with your coworker is understandable, just don't let it cost you. You were an innocent passenger. You're not attacking her, you're accessing coverage that exists precisely for this situation. If her limits are too low to cover your damages, there may be other avenues worth exploring. A free consult with a PI attorney wouldn't hurt just to understand your options — most won't charge you anything to talk it through.

  • 11
    wise-kestrel-557

    The silence from her insurer is not an accident. They drag their feet hoping you'll either give up or your medical records get harder to piece together. Do NOT wait around for them to call you. You have every right to contact them directly as an injured third party. Keep a log of every single call — date, time, name of whoever you spoke to. They will try to lowball you and act like your injuries aren't that serious.

    • 16
      warm-crane-737

      Former auto claims adjuster here. When a liability claim comes in for a passenger injury, it genuinely can take a few weeks to get rolling — but 'weeks of silence' is too long and you should be proactive. Call the insurer, identify yourself as the injured passenger, and open your own claim file if you haven't already. You don't have to go through your coworker for this. Also — get all your medical records and bills organized now. Adjusters make lower offers when documentation looks incomplete.

    • 1
      careful-passenger864

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

  • 16
    mellow-beaver-855

    A couple of things worth knowing: first, her liability policy should cover injuries to passengers she caused harm to — that's a standard part of how liability works. Second, if her coverage limit is low and your bills plus pain and suffering exceed it, you might look into whether you have underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage on your own auto policy (or even a family member's policy you live with). A lot of people forget that UIM can kick in for accidents you were in as a passenger. Not telling you what to do, just flagging it as something to ask about.

    • 2
      kind-survivor481

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 5
    clever-fox-155

    Please don't let the billing stress make you skip follow-up care for the rotator cuff. Shoulder strains that don't get proper PT can turn into chronic issues that are way harder to deal with later. Make sure all your treatment is documented — if this does go through insurance or a claim, having a clear medical paper trail matters a lot. Take care of yourself first.

    • 2
      soft-spoken-sidewalk135

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

  • 15
    calm-hare-074

    Call her insurance company today. Don't wait for them to call you, don't wait for your coworker to handle it, don't feel bad about it. You got hurt in her car because of her driving. That's what liability insurance exists to pay for. The discomfort you're feeling is normal but it's costing you money every day you sit on this.

  • 8
    quiet-lynx-389

    I'm sorry you're dealing with this on top of recovering from an actual injury. The fact that she's treating it like an inconvenience to her when you're the one with the hospital bill is really frustrating to read. You deserve to have this taken care of — please don't feel guilty for advocating for yourself. 💙