The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
Insurancecurious-dove-543

Someone sideswiped my parked car overnight — never dealt with insurance before, totally lost

So I woke up this morning to find my car absolutely mangled on the passenger side. Someone clearly drifted too wide making the turn onto my street and took out my whole rear quarter panel and bumper while I was asleep. I had NO idea it even happened — didn't hear a thing.

Luckily, one of my neighbors has a Ring camera that caught part of it, and there was actually a handwritten note under my wiper with a phone number. I don't know if the number is even real or if they just panicked and wrote down something random.

I called the non-emergency police line and they sent someone out. The officer took photos, wrote up a report, and told me to let MY insurance handle tracking down the other person — said not to call the number on the note myself and just give everything (the report number, the plate my neighbor got off the video, the note) to my insurer and they'd take it from there.

Honestly this is the first time anything like this has happened to me. I've never filed a claim, never been in an accident, nothing. I don't even fully understand what "subrogation" means when my insurer mentioned it on the phone.

A few things I'm wondering:

  • Should I actually follow the cop's advice and let my insurance lead, or should I try contacting the other person directly?
  • Will my rates go up even though this is 100% not my fault?
  • The damage looks worse in person than in photos — should I push for an independent estimate instead of just using whoever my insurance sends?

Any advice from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now. I feel completely out of my depth.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 15
    curious-swift-058

    Almost exact same thing happened to me about two years ago — woke up, car was wrecked, note on the windshield. Honestly the cop gave you solid advice. My insurer tracked down the other driver's coverage way faster than I could have on my own. The one thing I wish I'd done sooner was get my OWN repair estimate from a shop I trusted, not just the one my insurance recommended. The first estimate they got was suspiciously low.

    • 9
      gentle-driver782

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

  • 13
    tidy-vole-586

    Please do not let your insurance company be the only set of eyes on that damage. They have every incentive to lowball the repair cost, and adjusters are trained to move fast before you know what questions to ask. Get at least two independent estimates from body shops — shops that work for YOU, not shops on your insurer's "preferred" list. Those preferred shops have agreements with insurers that don't always favor getting your car back to pre-accident condition.

    • 12
      hearty-beaver-377

      Ugh, I'm so sorry. There's something about having your car hit while you're just safely inside your home sleeping that feels extra violating somehow. You did everything right — police report, documentation, the whole thing. Hope this gets sorted quickly for you 💙

  • 16
    sharp-finch-605

    Former adjuster here. The subrogation thing your insurer mentioned basically means: they'll pay for your repairs upfront and then go after the at-fault driver's insurance to get reimbursed. If they recover fully, you also get your deductible back. It actually works in your favor in a case like this.

    As for your rates — most states have protections that prevent insurers from raising your premium for a not-at-fault claim, but it varies. Worth asking your agent directly and getting the answer in writing if you can.

    • 16
      clear-raven-672

      Were you in the car at all, or is this purely property damage? I only ask because sometimes people dismiss soreness or tension they feel after the stress of discovering something like this and don't connect it to anything. If you did happen to be in the car even briefly around the time — or if you're feeling any neck or back stiffness — don't brush it off. Just worth mentioning.

  • 14
    silent-sparrow-830

    Make sure you hold onto EVERYTHING — the original note, any texts or calls from the other person if you do end up contacting them, the neighbor's camera footage (ask them to save it NOW before it overwrites), and your copy of the police report. If this drags out or the other driver's insurance disputes anything, that documentation is what makes or breaks your claim. Also photograph the damage yourself from every angle in good lighting before anything gets touched.

  • 13
    clever-badger-879

    Not legal advice, but one thing worth knowing: if the other driver's insurance tries to contact you directly before your own insurer has gotten involved, you're not obligated to give a recorded statement to THEIR adjuster. That's a common early move and it rarely benefits the person whose car got hit. Let your insurer do the talking at first.

  • 10
    plain-swift-634

    Don't call the number on the note. I know it's tempting but anything you say can get twisted later. Let the insurance companies talk to each other — that's literally what you pay premiums for. Get your own estimate, keep every document, and if the repair quote comes back weirdly low, push back hard.

    • 3
      hopeful-rider836

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