The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsgenuine-fox-309

Rear-ended a luxury car this morning — my PD coverage enough? First accident ever, freaking out

So I'm sitting here shaking a little because I just got home from the most stressful morning of my life. I was slowing down on the highway onramp and misjudged the gap — tapped the back of what turned out to be a brand new luxury SUV. Like, a really expensive one. Nobody was hurt, thankfully, and both of us pulled over fine.

The other driver was actually pretty calm about it, we exchanged info, took photos, all that. My bumper has a small crack but their rear end looks worse — some body panel damage and what might be a busted sensor or camera back there (those things cost a fortune to replace, I know).

I called my insurance right after and filed a claim. I carry $100k in property damage liability which I always thought was plenty. But now I'm down a rabbit hole reading about how luxury car repairs can run insane amounts because of specialized parts, labor rates at dealerships, and all the tech built into them.

A few things I'm anxious about:

  • Is $100k PD realistically enough for something like this?
  • Should I be talking to the other driver at all, or just let insurance handle it?
  • The other driver mentioned they might have their own body shop they want to use — is that normal?
  • Do I need my own lawyer for something like this even though I was at fault?

I've never been in an accident before. I don't even know what the next two weeks look like. Any of you been through something similar? I'd really appreciate hearing from people who've actually dealt with this.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 19
    clever-marten-377

    I was at fault in an accident involving a pretty high-end car a couple years back and went through all these exact same feelings. Honestly the $100k coverage helped me sleep at night. The repair ended up being significant but well within that limit. The scariest part was just not knowing — once the estimate came in I felt way less panicked. Try to breathe. The not-knowing phase is genuinely the worst part.

    • 14
      cool-marmot-939

      Former adjuster here. The other driver wanting to use their own shop is totally normal and honestly pretty common with luxury vehicles — some of those cars require certified technicians and the owners know it. Your insurer will likely negotiate directly with that shop. As for your coverage limit, $100k PD is on the higher end of what most people carry, so you're in a better position than the majority of people in your shoes. The sensor/camera stuff can add up, but you're probably okay. Just let the claims process do its thing.

    • 9
      gentle-commuter283

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

  • 12
    bright-hare-377

    Just a heads up — even though you're the at-fault party here, don't assume your insurer is fully on your side. Their job is to limit what they pay out, not to protect you personally. Read everything before you sign anything, and if they ask you to give a recorded statement, you are not legally required to do that without consulting someone first. People don't realize that until it's too late.

    • 1
      quiet-walker931

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 13
    hearty-sparrow-369

    A few practical things: document everything right now while it's fresh — your own photos, a written timeline of what happened, screenshots of any texts with the other driver. Even though you're at fault, having your own record matters. Also, ask your insurer for a copy of the claim number and the adjuster's direct contact. You don't want to be chasing people down later. And no, you probably don't need your own attorney if there are no injuries involved — but if an injury claim surfaces later (sometimes people report pain days after), that changes things fast.

  • 18
    kind-wolf-126

    Since you mentioned no one was hurt — keep an eye on yourself too. Adrenaline after an accident can mask how stressed your body actually is. I've seen people come into urgent care two or three days after a collision saying their neck or back started hurting and they didn't connect it to the crash. If you feel any stiffness or headaches in the next few days, get checked out. Doesn't matter that you were the one at fault.

  • 12
    spry-swan-564

    Stop talking to the other driver directly. Friendly is fine, but anything about fault, costs, or repairs? Let your insurance handle it. That's what you're paying them for. Every time you open your mouth to the other party you create potential liability for yourself. Be polite, be human, but route everything through the claim.

  • 12
    calm-sparrow-514

    Oh no, I can just feel the anxiety in this post. First accidents are so rattling even when everyone's physically okay. The financial stuff will sort itself out — you had insurance, you did the right things at the scene, you called right away. That's genuinely all you could have done. Be kind to yourself today.

    • 3
      weary-commuter786

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 10
    kind-marmot-542

    Quick question — when you say you 'tapped' their vehicle, what does that actually mean? Because damage to sensors and rear body panels on a luxury SUV can be deceptively expensive even in low-speed impacts. I'm not trying to scare you, just want to understand whether we're realistically talking a $4k repair or a $40k one, because the advice is a bit different depending on that gap.

    • 9
      brave-badger-519

      Not legal advice, but since no injuries were reported at the scene, this is most likely a straightforward property damage claim and your coverage should handle it. Where things get complicated is if the other driver reports injury symptoms later — even minor ones — because that shifts this from a PD claim into bodily injury territory, which is a different coverage bucket entirely. If you get any communication from the other driver's attorney down the road, don't respond yourself — forward it straight to your insurer. That's their job to handle.

  • 18
    hearty-swan-715

    Honestly? You did everything right. You stopped, you exchanged info, you called your insurance immediately. A lot of people panic and make things so much worse. The fact that you're being proactive and informed means you're already ahead. This will be a stressful few weeks but it's manageable, and you'll come out the other side knowing exactly how this process works.

    • 7
      gentle-parent600

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?