The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
Car accidentsgenuine-badger-425

Swerved to avoid a merging car, hit the curb hard — is this even a "real" accident?

So something happened on my commute last week that I can't stop thinking about and I genuinely don't know what to do.

I was cruising in the middle lane of a three-lane highway when a pickup out of nowhere started drifting into my lane from the right — no signal, no warning. Pure reflex: I yanked the wheel left and braked hard to avoid getting sideswiped. Ended up clipping the concrete median curb pretty good before I got the car back under control. The pickup just... kept going. Never stopped, never slowed down. Gone.

Here's the weird part — technically the pickup never touched me. No paint transfer, no contact. So I'm sitting there on the shoulder thinking, did an accident even happen? Do I even have a claim?

On the surface the car looks okay, but that curb hit was solid. I can feel something slightly off in the steering now — like a faint pull to the left that wasn't there before. I'm worried about:

  • Alignment obviously, but also wheel bearings, tie rods, subframe
  • Whether hidden damage could get worse over time if I ignore it
  • Whether my insurance will cover any of this if the other driver is never identified

I did have my dashcam running and it clearly shows the pickup crowding my lane and me reacting. The footage also caught a partial plate but it's blurry and I can't make out all the characters.

Has anyone dealt with a situation like this where there was no contact but you still ended up with damage from avoiding someone? What did you actually do next? My gut says this matters legally but I honestly have no idea.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 20
    quiet-badger-016

    Yes, this is absolutely a real accident — I had almost the exact same thing happen to me on an on-ramp two years ago. No contact, but I blew a tire swerving onto the shoulder and the other car disappeared. My insurer initially gave me the runaround claiming there was 'no collision' but my adjuster eventually processed it as an uninsured motorist property damage claim. Save that dashcam footage to at least two places right now before anything happens to it.

    • 5
      quick-finch-528

      How clear is 'partial plate' on your footage really? Like can you make out the state and maybe 3-4 characters, or is it basically unusable? And what kind of dashcam — does it have a wide dynamic range or does it wash out in bright highway light? Asking because it changes how useful it actually is if you're hoping police can trace the vehicle.

    • 10
      careful-driver655

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

    • 2
      grounded-offramp228

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 13
    quick-badger-747

    Be really careful how you describe this when you call your insurance. If you say 'the other car never hit me' right off the bat, some adjusters will immediately try to categorize it as a single-vehicle accident and push it onto your collision coverage with a deductible — instead of an uninsured/hit-and-run claim which may be handled differently under your policy. Let the dashcam footage do the talking first.

    • 7
      gentle-rider855

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 9
    candid-raven-290

    Worked claims for years. What you're describing is commonly called a 'phantom vehicle' incident internally, and yes, insurers do handle these — but the evidentiary bar is higher because anyone could claim an invisible car made them crash. Your dashcam is basically gold here. Make sure you note the time, exact location, lane position, everything while it's fresh. A written statement you create today carries more weight than one you reconstruct three weeks from now.

    Also, file a police report even if it feels pointless. That report number matters when you open the claim.

  • 9
    quiet-owl-515

    Can I ask — how are you feeling physically? Sometimes when adrenaline is pumping after something scary like that, you don't notice neck stiffness or shoulder tension until a day or two later. If anything feels off, even minor, please get checked out. Whiplash-type strains from sudden braking and wheel-jerking are real even without a direct collision.

    • 1
      patient-driver761

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 7
    quiet-vole-433

    Honestly reading this made my heart race a little. That sounds terrifying in the moment. I'm glad you're okay (physically at least). Please don't let the 'no contact' thing make you feel like you don't deserve to pursue this — that driver caused your damage whether they touched your car or not.

    • 0
      careful-dreamer980

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

  • 6
    clever-sparrow-508

    Three things, in order: (1) get the car inspected by a trusted mechanic before you drive it much more — steering pulls after a curb hit can mean something genuinely dangerous, (2) file a police report today, (3) back up that dashcam footage immediately. Everything else can wait 24 hours. Those three things cannot.

    • 8
      tired-optimist320

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 5
    brave-badger-421

    Not legal advice, but: in most states, an uninsured motorist claim can apply to hit-and-run scenarios — including ones where there was no physical contact — if you have independent corroborating evidence. Your dashcam footage sounds like it could qualify. Worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney to understand your options before you say too much to your own insurer. Not legal advice.