The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
bright-wolf-452

Someone hit my parked car at work and drove off — do I have any options?

So I came out of my shift yesterday to find a pretty solid dent and scrape along my rear quarter panel. Nobody left a note. Nothing.

The lot where I work is pretty low-traffic — it's basically a small industrial complex, maybe three or four businesses sharing the space. Not a lot of random people coming and going. I noticed a smear of dark blue paint on my silver car, and when I walked the lot I spotted a dark blue SUV parked nearby with what looked like silver paint transfer on its front bumper. Same height, too. I snapped a bunch of photos on my phone right away.

I went inside to grab my supervisor because I thought maybe management had footage or knew whose vehicle it was. Couldn't have been gone more than ten minutes. When we came back outside, the blue SUV was just… gone.

I checked with the front office and apparently the exterior cameras on that side of the building haven't worked in months. Real helpful, right.

So now I'm sitting here wondering: do I have anything here? The paint transfer photos feel like something but I don't know if that's enough. I don't have a plate number. I do have uninsured motorist coverage on my policy but I'm honestly not sure if hit-and-run parked-car stuff even falls under that.

Has anyone dealt with this before? Did you end up getting anywhere with it? I'm mostly just frustrated that someone could do this and just… leave.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 14
    wise-raven-258

    This happened to me in a grocery store parking lot a couple years back. I had the paint transfer photos and nothing else. Filed a police report anyway — my insurance company actually required it before they'd process anything. Didn't catch the person but the report helped move things along with my own coverage. Definitely do that first if you haven't already.

    • 10
      patient-rider387

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

    • 1
      thankful-sidewalk192

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

  • 19
    swift-marmot-117

    When you call your insurer, be careful how you word things. If you say 'I think I know who did it' without a plate or confirmed ID, they might try to drag their feet or push it into a weird gray area. Stick to the facts: unknown driver, hit and run, here are my photos. Keep it clean and documented.

    • 0
      patient-walker912

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 9
    wise-wren-537

    So from the inside — paint transfer photos actually carry more weight than most people think. Adjusters are trained to look at transfer color, height consistency, and damage shape. It won't identify the other driver for you, but it does support that you were hit by something, which matters for your own claim. The bigger question is whether your uninsured motorist property damage coverage applies in your state for hit-and-runs. Some states require physical contact to be documented, others are more flexible. Worth a specific call to your agent asking about UMPD and hit-and-run parked vehicle — use those exact words.

    • 17
      mellow-dove-002

      File a police report today if you haven't. Even if they can't do much, it creates an official record with a timestamp, which matters for insurance and potentially for anything legal down the road. Also — go back to that complex and ask every business if they have exterior cameras, not just yours. Sometimes a neighboring unit's camera catches an angle management doesn't even know about.

    • 6
      tidy-kestrel-763

      Not about the legal side, but just checking — were you in the car when it happened or is this purely property damage? Sometimes people don't realize they were sitting in a parked car that got jolted and brush off any soreness as nothing. If you feel any neck or back stiffness in the next day or two, please don't ignore it.

    • 0
      weathered-mile-marker732

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

  • 17
    daring-elk-967

    Realistically: without a plate you're probably not tracking this person down. But that doesn't mean you're out of options. File the police report, claim under your own collision or UMPD, and pay the deductible if you have to. Frustrating? Yes. End of the world? No. The photos you have are still useful for your own claim even if they never ID the other car.

  • 16
    daring-sparrow-787

    The fact that you moved fast and got those paint transfer photos before the SUV left is actually a big deal. A lot of people in this situation have zero physical evidence. You've got something concrete. That's more than you might think.

  • 12
    patient-grouse-588

    How close was the SUV actually parked to your car? Like, are we talking right next to you, or across the lot? Because paint transfer is compelling if the proximity lines up, but if there were several vehicles between you two it might be harder to make that case to an adjuster. Just curious how tight the connection is.