The Shoulder
The Shoulder
66
brave-hare-166

Swerved to avoid a hit-and-run and now I'm stuck with all the damage — is this really how it works?

Still kind of shaking as I write this, honestly.

I was merging onto the highway yesterday morning when a pickup in the next lane just drifted straight into my space without signaling. I yanked the wheel hard to the right to avoid getting sideswiped and ended up clipping the concrete barrier on the shoulder. The pickup never slowed down — just kept going like nothing happened.

Here's the thing: we never actually made contact. My car hit the barrier, not his truck. So technically it's a "no-contact" accident. I pulled over, called 911, got a report filed. I even managed to grab the last four digits of his plate before he disappeared into traffic. My coworker was riding with me and saw the whole thing. But there's no dashcam footage, no traffic camera that I know of, and the responding officer basically told me it would be hard to prove.

My front bumper is cracked, there's scraping damage along the passenger side, and I've got some stiffness in my neck that's starting to bug me (going to urgent care today).

My insurance has uninsured/underinsured coverage so I think I can at least file something, but I'm terrified of my rates going up for an accident that was completely not my fault. And the guy who caused this just... drives away free?

Has anyone dealt with a no-contact hit-and-run where you were the one who ended up hitting something else trying to avoid them? Did your UM coverage actually come through? Did the partial plate help at all? I feel like I did everything right in the moment and I'm still the one getting punished for it.

Any advice or even just commiseration is welcome right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 20
    quick-otter-039

    This happened to me almost exactly — someone ran me off the road and I ended up in a ditch, no contact between our vehicles. The partial plate actually DID help in my case. My insurer was able to use it combined with the police report to treat it more seriously than a random no-contact claim. File the report, keep that plate info front and center, and document everything your coworker saw while it's fresh.

    • 15
      silent-crow-196

      Be really careful how you talk to your own insurance company about this. I know it feels like they're on your side, but adjusters are trained to look for reasons to reduce payouts or flag claims as 'not clearly caused by another party.' Stick to the facts, don't speculate or over-explain, and consider writing things down before you call so you don't ramble under pressure. The 'your rates might go up' fear is real — ask them directly whether a not-at-fault UM claim affects your premium in your state before you commit to anything.

  • 19
    plain-grouse-389

    Not legal advice, but the witness-in-the-vehicle issue is worth looking into for your specific state's UM rules. Some jurisdictions have carved out exceptions to the physical contact requirement when there's a corroborating witness. A quick consult with a PI attorney — most do free ones — could tell you in 20 minutes whether you have a viable path beyond just your own UM claim. Don't assume the 'no contact = no case' framing is the final word.

  • 19
    silent-marten-892

    I'm so sorry this happened to you. It's genuinely infuriating that someone can cause an accident and just keep driving while you're left dealing with the damage, the fear, and all the paperwork. I really hope the partial plate leads somewhere. Take care of your neck first — everything else can be sorted out, but your health can't wait.

    • 1
      tired-neighbor942

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 12
    calm-bison-410

    Three things to do right now if you haven't already: (1) Get the police report number and request the full written report as soon as it's available. (2) Take photos of everything — your car, the barrier you hit, the road markings, all of it. (3) Write out a timeline of exactly what happened while it's still fresh, including your coworker's account. Do this before you talk to any adjuster. You'll thank yourself later.

    • 4
      plainspoken-mile-marker241

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 10
    hearty-badger-422

    Worked in claims for years. No-contact accidents are genuinely one of the harder scenarios but they're not impossible. Most UM policies DO cover this, but a lot of states require 'physical contact' for UM to kick in — which is exactly the loophole you might be hitting. However, some states allow an independent witness to substitute for the contact requirement. Your coworker being in the car is potentially huge. Get a written statement from them ASAP while the details are still sharp. That could be the difference between a paid claim and a denied one.

    • 9
      mellow-swan-011

      Please don't brush off the neck stiffness. Adrenaline masks a lot in the first few hours after an accident — I've seen patients feel 'fine' at the scene and then wake up the next day barely able to turn their head. Go to urgent care like you planned, be thorough about describing the mechanism of the accident (sudden hard jerk to the right), and ask them to document it properly. That medical record becomes part of your claim file and it matters.

    • 18
      candid-crane-121

      I know this feels like a disaster right now, but honestly — you reacted fast, you kept yourself and your coworker from a much worse collision, you stayed calm enough to get a partial plate, and you filed a report. That's all the right stuff. The system is frustrating but you've given yourself the best possible foundation to work with. A lot of people in a panic don't get any of that.

  • 8
    patient-wolf-435

    Few questions that might matter here: Was the highway merge lane single or double? Any businesses or traffic cameras near where it happened that you might not have noticed? And when you say your coworker 'saw the whole thing' — were they watching the pickup specifically or just aware of the sudden swerve? There's a difference in terms of how useful their account actually is. Not doubting you, just thinking about what an adjuster or investigator is going to ask.