The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
Insurancekeen-marmot-398

Swerved to miss an animal, hit a utility pole — insurance or just pay myself?

So this happened last week and I'm still kind of shaken up about it. I was driving home late on a back road and a raccoon or possum — honestly it was too dark to tell — darted right into my lane. I jerked the wheel instinctively and clipped a wooden utility pole on the shoulder pretty hard.

The damage is real but I don't know how bad yet. My front quarter panel is crumpled, the headlight housing is cracked and the light itself is just... gone, and there's some kind of scraping damage along the passenger side. My car is about four years old, paid off, nothing fancy but I need it for work every single day.

Here's where I'm spiraling a bit:

  • My deductible is $1,000
  • I have a clean record and I'm genuinely scared my rates go up if I file
  • I have no idea if this counts as a "collision" or "comprehensive" claim — does hitting a pole after swerving for an animal matter for which type it is?
  • I don't know if the utility company comes after me for pole damage??

I haven't called my insurance yet. I took a bunch of photos at the scene and my neighbor (who's a mechanic) thinks the repair could go either way on whether it clears my deductible.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Did filing end up being worth it, or did you regret it? Honestly just want to hear from people who've been through a similar call.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 22
    swift-grouse-776

    I know you didn't mention injuries but I just want to throw this out there — even a "minor" jolt where you instinctively brace against the wheel can cause soft tissue stuff in your neck and shoulders that doesn't show up for a day or two. If you're feeling any stiffness or headaches, please get checked out. Don't just assume you're fine because you walked away. I've seen too many people dismiss it early and then really struggle weeks later.

    • 7
      soft-spoken-backseat958

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 17
    tidy-marten-351

    Quick clarification on your coverage question: swerving to avoid an animal and hitting a fixed object (like a pole) is almost always treated as a collision claim, not comprehensive. Comprehensive typically covers you if you hit the animal directly. It's a weird distinction but it genuinely matters because some people have different deductibles for each. Worth pulling out your declarations page and double-checking your two deductible amounts before you decide anything.

    Also on the utility pole — yes, the utility company can bill you for pole replacement. Some insurers handle that automatically, some don't. Another reason not to just quietly pay out of pocket without understanding your full exposure first.

  • 16
    keen-vole-392

    Whatever you do, don't call your insurer just to "ask a hypothetical question" about whether you should file. A lot of people don't realize that inquiry can still be logged and potentially counted against you at renewal depending on the company. Get your repair estimate from a body shop first, then make a real decision.

    • 10
      patient-survivor512

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

  • 11
    quiet-mole-174

    I used to handle exactly these kinds of single-vehicle claims. A few things from the inside: (1) yes, most carriers log even exploratory calls, so be careful; (2) if the utility company submits a property damage claim to your insurer, you may end up with a record whether you filed or not — so hiding it isn't always an option; (3) your rate impact depends heavily on your specific carrier and your state's regulations. Some states limit how much a single not-at-fault or single-vehicle accident can affect your rate. Look up your state's rules or just call your agent and ask hypothetically about the policy terms, not about your specific incident.

    • 11
      candid-wolf-346

      How solid is your neighbor's estimate really? "Could go either way" is a pretty wide range when your deductible is $1,000. Front quarter panel work and headlight replacement alone at a real body shop can vary wildly depending on whether anything structural got bent. I'd get at least two actual written quotes before making any decision — a mechanic friend eyeballing it in your driveway isn't the same thing.

  • 7
    careful-hare-394

    Hey, the fact that you swerved probably means your instincts are good — and you walked away. That's genuinely the win here. The car stuff is stressful but it's all solvable. Good luck sorting it out.

  • 5
    sharp-marmot-963

    I did almost the exact same thing two years ago — deer instead of a raccoon, guardrail instead of a pole, but same panic situation. I filed the claim and honestly my rates barely moved. I think I saw like $8 more a month at renewal? The repair was way over my deductible so it was worth it. If your repair estimate comes in close to $1,000 though, I'd get a shop quote first before you call anyone.

    • 2
      tired-neighbor122

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 4
    clever-newt-591

    Get a written estimate from a body shop before you do anything else. Everything else — rates, deductibles, whether to file — is just noise until you know the actual number.

    • 8
      weary-traveler454

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.