The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insuranceswift-stoat-436

Someone hit my car in a parking lot, now claiming they magically got insurance same day??

So this is a weird one and I'm still kind of processing it.

My neighbor borrowed my car to run an errand for me — I've been slammed with work and she offered to help out. While she was parked at a hardware store waiting to load some stuff up, a guy in a beat-up SUV reversed right into the rear quarter panel. Not a tap either — we're talking a real crunch. My neighbor is okay, thankfully, but my car is pretty roughed up on that side.

The guy gets out, they exchange info, and he straight-up tells her he doesn't have insurance. Okay, annoying, but at least he was upfront about it. They swap numbers and he leaves.

Here's where it gets weird: about four hours later he texts my neighbor a photo of what looks like an insurance card — with today's date as the policy start date. Same day. Come on.

I called my own insurance to ask about my uninsured motorist coverage and thankfully I do have it. They want a police report, but when I called the non-emergency line, the officer I spoke to said since nobody was hurt and it was on private property, they wouldn't send anyone out. Apparently I can file something myself online but I'm not sure if that counts as an "official" report.

My car isn't brand new by any means — it's got some age and miles on it — but it runs perfectly and I depend on it. I'm worried the payout won't come close to covering what the repair actually costs.

Has anyone dealt with same-day insurance shenanigans like this? And does a self-filed report actually satisfy what insurance needs? Feeling pretty lost here.

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9 replies

  • 9
    tidy-beaver-846

    The same-day insurance card thing happened to me too. My adjuster told me straight up that if the policy wasn't active at the time of the accident, it doesn't count — doesn't matter if they got it two hours later. Insurance isn't retroactive like that. Make sure your own insurer knows the timeline and has that text with the timestamp as evidence.

    • 0
      restless-late-shift480

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

  • 16
    wise-vole-873

    Yeah, that same-day card is almost certainly fraud or at best a coincidence that won't hold up. When I worked claims, we'd see people try to backdoor coverage like that occasionally. The carrier on that card will pull the bind time — the exact minute the policy went into effect — and compare it to when the loss occurred. If the accident happened before the bind time, they'll deny it. Keep that text message screenshot with the timestamp and don't let it get buried.

    Also on the police report question — a lot of insurers will accept a self-reported incident report as long as you can show you made a genuine attempt to get law enforcement involved and they declined. Document that call to the non-emergency line: date, time, name of whoever you spoke to if you got it.

  • 5
    candid-fox-890

    Don't let your own insurance adjuster lowball you on the car's value just because it has miles on it. They're going to pull a valuation tool and give you a number that benefits them. Do your own homework — check what comparable vehicles are actually selling for in your area and come ready to push back. They're counting on you to just accept the first number.

  • 7
    warm-crow-558

    The self-filed report situation is worth clarifying directly with your insurer before you assume it'll work. Ask them specifically: 'Will an online self-report satisfy the police report requirement for my UM claim?' Get the answer in writing if you can — even just an email confirmation. Some policies are flexible about this, others aren't, and you don't want to find out the hard way weeks from now that your claim got denied on a technicality.

  • 21
    candid-heron-488

    Your neighbor said she's fine, but if there was any kind of jolt when he hit — even if she wasn't thrown around — it's worth having her get checked out in the next day or two. Soft tissue stuff from even low-speed impacts can sneak up on you 24-48 hours later. I've seen people feel totally okay at the scene and then wake up two days later barely able to turn their neck. Better to have a visit on record just in case.

  • 20
    mellow-grouse-231

    Not legal advice, but the combination of a same-day insurance card and an uninsured motorist claim can get complicated fast — especially if the other guy's insurer tries to argue coverage existed at time of loss. Your UM carrier and his (potential) carrier may end up pointing fingers at each other. If your repair estimate comes back high or there are any injury questions down the road, it might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options. Most of them don't charge anything to talk.

  • 12
    brave-marmot-771

    File the online report today, screenshot everything — the texts, the insurance card photo with the timestamp, any photos of the damage — and get them to your insurer ASAP. Stop waiting and wondering, just start building your paper trail now. The clock on some of this stuff is real.

  • 9
    gentle-fox-436

    This sounds so stressful, especially when you were just trying to get a simple errand done. I'm glad your neighbor wasn't hurt. Really hope the insurance stuff works out — it seems so unfair that you're the one jumping through hoops when someone hit YOUR car.