The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
Property damagegenuine-dove-937

Swerved to avoid a collision, now my car's totaled & I can't get to work — totally lost

I don't even know where to start. About a week ago I was driving home from an early shift when a pickup truck ran a red light right in front of me. I yanked the wheel to avoid getting T-boned, overcorrected, and ended up wrapping my car around a concrete barrier on the side of the road. Airbags went off, car is 100% done.

The ER cleared me that night but I've had this dull, throbbing headache every single day since, and my neck and shoulders feel like I slept on concrete for a month. I know I should probably follow up with someone but honestly I haven't had time to breathe.

Here's where things are spiraling:

  • The at-fault driver's insurance is dragging their feet on the rental. My adjuster keeps saying it's "still under review." It's been over a week.
  • I take public transit to get to my follow-up appointments but it's a 90-minute round trip and I'm exhausted.
  • My partner had to take unpaid days off just to drive me around. They're a freelancer and every missed day hits us hard.
  • My own car was older so the payout offer feels insultingly low — like I can't replace what I had with what they're offering.

I feel guilty that my partner is sacrificing income because of something that wasn't even my fault to begin with. I keep catching myself apologizing to them for existing right now, which is a weird headspace to be in.

Has anyone dealt with a slow rental approval or a lowball total-loss offer? How did you push back? I feel completely underwater and I don't want to make a mistake that costs me later.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    swift-vole-537

    Ugh, this hit close to home. Almost the exact same situation happened to me — not at-fault, no rental for almost two weeks because the other driver's insurance kept saying liability wasn't 'confirmed yet.' What finally worked for me was calling every single day, being polite but firm, and documenting every conversation with names and timestamps. They got tired of hearing from me faster than I expected. Don't let them wait you out.

  • 12
    sharp-vole-347

    That 'still under review' line is a classic delay tactic. They know you need a car now and every day you're without one is pressure on you to just accept whatever number they throw out. Don't fall for it. Keep a written log of every call, every email. If they confirmed their driver was at fault, they owe you a rental and you can push hard on that.

    • 1
      weathered-backseat583

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

  • 15
    bright-dove-681

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest — rental approval sometimes just sits in a queue unless someone escalates it. Ask to speak to a supervisor or a claims manager, not just your adjuster. Also specifically ask them to put in writing why the rental hasn't been approved yet. That alone tends to speed things up because nobody wants to document a bad-faith delay.

    • 9
      honest-rider455

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 17
    keen-marmot-222

    On the total-loss offer — that number is almost always negotiable, especially on older vehicles that were in great shape. Pull listings for comparable cars in your area (same mileage range, same trim) and send them to the adjuster as a counter. Most people don't realize the first offer is basically a starting point, not a final answer. Also, your headaches and neck pain? Document everything. See a doctor even if you feel like it's 'minor.' Gaps in treatment can really hurt you down the road if symptoms worsen.

  • 20
    swift-fox-173

    Please don't brush off those daily headaches. Post-accident headaches can sometimes be a sign of something that needs attention — concussion symptoms, soft tissue issues in the cervical spine, even just stress responses that build up. I'm not trying to scare you, but a week of persistent head pain after an airbag deployment is worth a proper follow-up, not just the ER visit. Your body went through a lot.

  • 17
    steady-wolf-966

    I just want to say — none of this is your fault. Someone ran a red light. You reacted. Please be gentle with yourself. The guilt you're carrying about your partner's lost income is understandable but misplaced. You didn't ask for this. Sending you a lot of support from a stranger on the internet. 💙

  • 8
    patient-wolf-209

    Not legal advice, but a few things worth knowing: if the other driver was clearly at fault, their liability coverage should cover your rental during the loss-of-use period. If they're stalling unreasonably, there may be bad-faith implications. Also, that lowball total-loss number — you are not obligated to accept it. A lot of people don't realize they can dispute it. If you're feeling overwhelmed managing all of this while dealing with injury, it might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options.

    • 1
      hopeful-survivor709

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 13
    daring-crow-943

    Two action items, do them today: 1) Call the at-fault driver's insurance and specifically ask them to confirm in writing whether liability has been accepted. If it has, demand rental approval immediately. 2) Go to urgent care or your PCP about the headaches — not optional. Everything else can wait a day. Those two things first.

  • 7
    patient-dove-740

    I know it feels like everything is piling on right now, but you caught this early. You're documenting, you're asking questions, you're not just rolling over and accepting whatever they say — that matters more than you know. A lot of people sign away their rights before they even understand what they're entitled to. You're already ahead of that.