The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
plain-newt-301

Someone pulled out of a parking spot without looking and clipped my rear end — what should I get checked?

Still kind of shaking as I type this. Was driving through a busy strip mall lot this afternoon, going maybe 10 mph max, when a van swung backwards out of a diagonal spot without even glancing behind it and caught the rear corner of my car. The impact was way louder than I expected for a low-speed hit — felt it through the whole seat.

Visually I can see the rear quarter panel is pushed in and the wheel well looks off. The tire itself seems okay but the wheel is sitting at a weird angle that's freaking me out a little. I know I need to call my insurance and I already took like 40 photos at the scene, got the other driver's info, and asked a bystander for her number as a witness.

My questions: 1. With a wheel sitting crooked like that, is there likely suspension or axle damage underneath that won't be obvious just looking at it? 2. Should I take it straight to my own mechanic or let the other driver's insurance send it to one of their shops? 3. I didn't feel hurt at the moment but my neck is starting to get stiff a few hours later — is that normal to feel delayed?

Other driver admitted fault on the spot and the lot has cameras, so I'm hoping liability isn't a fight. Just want to make sure I don't miss anything that could bite me later. Any advice from people who've been through something like this is really appreciated.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 14
    quiet-grouse-485

    That crooked wheel is a red flag — when someone hit my rear corner a couple years ago it looked minor but there was a bent control arm and damaged wheel bearing underneath. The body shop found it when they put it on the lift. Do NOT just trust what you can see from the outside.

    • 9
      wise-kestrel-632

      Please don't brush off that neck stiffness. Soft tissue injuries from impacts — whiplash especially — almost always feel worse on day two or three than they do right after. Your body floods with adrenaline at the scene and masks a lot. If it's still bothering you tomorrow morning, go get checked out at urgent care or your doctor, and make sure they document it. Having a medical record tied to the accident date matters a lot later.

    • 1
      curious-survivor423

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

    • 5
      restless-road-soul909

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

  • 17
    curious-crow-101

    Whatever you do, do NOT let the other driver's insurance pressure you into using one of their 'preferred' repair shops. Those shops have relationships with the insurer and their incentive is to keep the estimate low, not to make sure your car is fully safe. You have the right to choose your own shop in basically every state.

    • 13
      kind-raven-984

      Former claims adjuster here. A few things from the inside: document your stiffness NOW — even just a text to a friend or a note in your phone with today's date and exactly how you're feeling. Adjusters look at the timeline between the accident and when you first mentioned symptoms. Also, that witness number you grabbed is gold. Hang onto it. The lot cameras matter too — ask the property manager in writing to preserve the footage before it gets overwritten, because most systems loop within a week or two.

    • 11
      silent-marten-759

      Three things: (1) Get the car on a lift at a trusted mechanic before you drive it further — a wheel at a weird angle can be a safety issue. (2) See a doctor. (3) Don't post about this on your personal social media. That's it. Everything else can be figured out.

    • 5
      patient-optimist475

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

    • 5
      level-sidewalk863

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

  • 16
    bright-crow-200

    On the shop question: get your own independent estimate first, before you agree to anything with the other insurer. Once you sign off on a repair estimate you can end up waiving rights to go back for hidden damage found later. A written supplement process exists but it's a headache. Also keep every receipt, every Uber or rental car cost — those are recoverable as part of your claim.

    • 5
      careful-owl-922

      Ugh, I'm so sorry this happened to you. The part about still shaking really got me — even 'minor' accidents are genuinely traumatic and people don't talk about that enough. Please make sure you're taking care of yourself physically AND mentally. It's okay if this messes with you emotionally for a bit.

  • 19
    warm-finch-599

    Not legal advice, but if that neck stiffness lingers more than a day or two, it's worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney before you give any recorded statement to the other driver's insurance. Recorded statements can be used to minimize your injury claim later. You're not obligated to give one.

  • 13
    silent-dove-566

    Did you get a copy of any police report, or did officers even respond? And did the other driver's insurance info match what she told you — like did you verify the policy was actually active? Just asking because sometimes people at fault hand over expired insurance cards in the chaos and you only find out later.

    • 1
      kind-traveler335

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.