The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
spry-marmot-542

Someone hit my parked car and left a note — now they're hinting at handling it "privately." Nervous.

So this happened yesterday and I'm still kind of processing it.

I came out of the gym to find a note tucked under my wiper. Someone had clipped the rear corner of my car pulling out of the spot next to me. The note had a name and phone number, said they were sorry and wanted to "make things right." Sweet gesture, honestly — at least they didn't just drive off.

I texted the number and we had a brief back-and-forth. She seems nice enough. But when I mentioned getting an estimate she said something like "let's just chat first and figure out the best way to handle this between us" — and that's where I started to feel uneasy. No mention of insurance. No offer of her carrier info. Nothing.

The damage looks like it might be minor — there's a scrape along the rear quarter panel for sure, and the trim piece near the bumper is sitting funny, like something got pushed. Could be cosmetic. Could be more underneath, I genuinely don't know.

Here's my situation: this woman and I actually run in some of the same circles. Mutual friends, same neighborhood. I don't want to make this into a whole thing if it doesn't need to be. But I also don't want to shake hands on some informal agreement, get to the shop, and find out there's actual structural damage that costs three times what we agreed on — with no recourse.

Is there ever a scenario where private/cash settlement is actually okay? What protections would I even have? And how do I bring up insurance without it feeling like I'm coming at her sideways?

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12 replies

  • 20
    spry-heron-692

    I totally get not wanting it to be awkward — especially when you'll see this person around. But honestly, if she's a reasonable person she should understand that you need to know what you're actually dealing with before agreeing to anything. A good neighbor wouldn't want you to be out of pocket for something she caused.

    • 4
      level-overpass987

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 19
    curious-stoat-543

    "Handle it between us" is code for: she doesn't want her rates to go up. That's her problem, not yours. The second you agree to skip insurance and something goes wrong — hidden damage, she backs out of paying, whatever — you're stuck. Be polite, be neighborly, but protect yourself.

  • 18
    daring-swift-696

    I was in almost this exact spot last year — someone I knew from my kids' soccer league hit my car in a parking lot. We tried to handle it privately because it felt awkward, and I genuinely regret it. The body shop found damage to the inner structure that wasn't visible at all from the outside, and by then we'd already agreed on an amount. I had no leverage. Just go through insurance. It doesn't have to be a fight — you can be totally friendly about it.

  • 16
    genuine-stoat-244

    I processed claims for years. The number of times I saw people do a cash handshake, then come back weeks later with a supplement because the shop found frame damage... it's really common. Body damage that looks minor can absolutely involve the subframe or crumple zones you'd never see standing in a parking lot. If you do decide to go private, at absolute minimum you need a written agreement after you have a full shop estimate — not before. But honestly, insurance is just cleaner.

  • 16
    daring-vole-824

    This is about your car, not injuries, so my usual lane doesn't apply much here — but I'll say this: don't let social pressure rush you into a decision. Take the time you need. Anyone reasonable will understand that.

    • 7
      tired-wanderer455

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 16
    curious-tern-935

    At least she left a note! Genuinely, a lot of people don't. That does suggest she wants to do right by you — so framing the conversation as 'I just want to make sure we both have the full picture before we settle anything' is pretty easy. You're not accusing her of anything, just being thorough.

  • 11
    calm-seal-581

    If you want to consider the private route, a few things you'd want in writing: the agreed amount, that it covers all damage related to the incident (not just what's visible now), and signatures from both of you. Some people also get a notarized statement. But even then, if she later refuses to pay or the damage turns out to be bigger, your options get complicated. It's not impossible — just riskier than it sounds when everyone's being friendly.

  • 11
    quiet-beaver-066

    Has she actually said she doesn't want to use insurance, or are you reading into the 'let's chat' thing? Genuinely asking — because there's a difference between someone dodging the process and someone just being casual about it. Might be worth directly asking for her insurance info before you assume the worst.

  • 10
    sharp-newt-099

    Get the estimate first. Don't agree to anything — cash or otherwise — until a real shop has looked at it. Then decide. Going to the shop isn't the same as filing a claim, and it gives you actual numbers to work with instead of guesses.

  • 10
    daring-kestrel-128

    Not legal advice, but one thing worth knowing: once you accept a private settlement and sign anything releasing her from further responsibility, that's typically it — even if more damage surfaces later. So the sequence matters a lot. Estimate first, agreement second, payment third. Never the other way around. If she's resistant to waiting for a proper estimate, that tells you something.