The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Insurancecalm-otter-712

Said the wrong thing at the scene and now insurance is using it against me — heads up y'all

This is equal parts warning and me venting into the void, so bear with me.

Three weeks ago I got hit from behind while I was completely stopped at a red light waiting for traffic to clear. Pretty clear-cut, right? Wrong.

Right after the impact I was shaken up and kind of in shock-mode. The other driver hopped out looking upset and I — trying to be a decent human being — said something like "hey, you okay? I hope I didn't do anything to cause that." I was just trying to defuse the tension. I didn't even mean it literally.

Turns out the other driver had his phone propped up on his dash recording the whole thing, including that little exchange. He handed that clip straight to his insurance company and now they're citing my words as an admission of partial fault. My claim is in limbo, my car has been sitting at a shop for almost a month, and my neck is still messed up.

I had a dashcam but it only faced forward. It shows I was 100% stationary before impact. Doesn't seem to matter to the adjuster apparently.

A few things I wish someone had told me before this happened:

  • The scene of an accident is basically a deposition you don't know you're giving
  • The other driver may already be recording before you even step out of your car
  • "I'm sorry" or anything that sounds apologetic can and will be twisted
  • Stick to the facts: are you hurt, here's my info, let's wait for police

I'm not even mad at the other driver anymore, I'm just frustrated at a system that can hang you out to dry over one nervous sentence. Anyone else been through something like this? What did you do?

9replies

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9 replies

  • 19
    tidy-swan-892

    Oh man, this hit close to home. After my accident I said 'I didn't even see you coming' and somehow that got twisted into me admitting I wasn't paying attention. I was the one who got T-boned at an intersection! The words you say in those first panicked minutes can absolutely haunt you. Really sorry you're dealing with this.

    • 9
      warm-swift-065

      This is exactly what adjusters are trained to look for. They call it a 'spontaneous statement' and it carries a lot of weight in their internal evaluations even when it's clearly taken out of context. The whole system is set up to find any foothold they can to reduce or deny your payout. Don't trust that your dashcam footage alone will fix it — you may need someone in your corner to push back formally.

  • 13
    wise-wolf-537

    I used to work claims and I can confirm this is real. We were literally trained to listen for anything at the scene that sounded like uncertainty or apology. I always thought it was kind of gross honestly — most people say that stuff out of pure adrenaline and basic politeness, not because they actually did something wrong. The recording makes it harder because it's not just hearsay anymore. Your dashcam footage showing you were stationary is your strongest counter-evidence. Make sure that gets formally submitted and documented, not just mentioned in a phone call.

    • 14
      spry-wren-922

      Not legal advice, but this is a situation where a free consult with a PI attorney is genuinely worth your time. Statements made at the scene can be challenged, especially when your physical evidence (stationary vehicle, rear-end impact) directly contradicts the interpretation being put on your words. An attorney can also communicate with the insurance companies on your behalf so you stop saying anything else that could be used against you.

  • 19
    clever-badger-380

    A few practical things worth knowing: First, get a copy of every piece of evidence you've submitted in writing and confirm it's actually in your claim file. Adjusters sometimes 'lose' things. Second, if there's a recorded statement request coming your way — which there probably will be — you are generally not required to give one to the other driver's insurance company. Talk to someone before you do that. Third, the other driver's insurer has a conflict of interest here; they're not looking out for you.

  • 18
    steady-hare-338

    Please don't let the insurance battle distract you from actually treating your neck. Soft tissue injuries from rear-end hits can feel manageable one week and then flare badly weeks later. Make sure everything is documented through a doctor, not just urgent care. If you end up needing more treatment down the road, you want a paper trail that started early.

  • 10
    kind-beaver-163

    This is so unfair and I'm genuinely angry on your behalf reading this. You were trying to be KIND and they're using it against you. I hope you're able to get this sorted out — please don't just let them railroad you into accepting fault for something that obviously wasn't your fault.

  • 13
    gentle-sparrow-901

    Stop talking to their insurance entirely. Like right now, today. You don't owe them a single additional word. Get a lawyer on the phone before your next interaction with anyone on their side. The dashcam footage showing you were stopped is solid — don't let them bury it.

  • 5
    careful-heron-209

    Has your own insurance company gotten involved and pushed back on this at all? Usually when fault is genuinely disputed your insurer is supposed to go to bat for you. Curious whether they're actually contesting it or just kind of rolling over.