The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancebold-crane-065

Switching car insurance mid-claim — will my current carrier still finish what they started?

Hey everyone, kind of a weird situation and I can't find a clear answer anywhere so figured I'd ask here.

About three weeks ago I got rear-ended at a red light. The other driver was clearly at fault — there were witnesses and everything. I decided to just go through my own insurance instead of battling the at-fault driver's carrier, so my insurer opened a claim and I paid my deductible out of pocket. They're handling repairs and apparently pursuing the other side for reimbursement (subrogation, I think it's called?).

Here's the thing — I've been meaning to switch insurers for months because my current premium went up for no reason I can understand. My new policy is ready to go and I want to make it active soon. But now I'm nervous about what happens to my open claim if I cancel my current policy.

Specifically wondering:

  • Will my current insurer still finish processing the repairs even if I switch mid-claim?
  • More importantly, will they still chase the at-fault driver's insurance for my deductible and send that reimbursement back to me once I'm no longer their customer?
  • Could canceling look bad or give them any reason to drag their feet?

I'm not in a huge rush to switch but I also don't want to keep paying the higher premium longer than I have to. The repair shop says the car should be done within the next week or so.

Has anyone been through something like this? Really appreciate any insight. Trying not to accidentally mess up something that's going fairly smoothly so far.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 22
    careful-seal-826

    I actually went through almost this exact thing last year. I switched carriers while my claim was still open and my old insurer kept everything moving — finished the repairs, handled the subrogation, and mailed me a check for my deductible a few months later. Honestly it was smoother than I expected. Just make sure you keep your contact info updated with the old insurer so they can reach you when the reimbursement comes through.

    • 8
      curious-vole-779

      From what I've seen working adjacent to this stuff — your claim is a contractual obligation that was created while your policy was active. Canceling going forward doesn't retroactively erase what they owe you under that open claim. The subrogation process can take a while (sometimes many months), so just document everything: claim number, adjuster name, any written confirmations. Keep a paper trail so there's no 'we couldn't reach you' excuse down the line.

  • 19
    tidy-newt-464

    One thing worth clarifying — did you get anything in writing confirming they accepted liability and opened the subrogation file? And is the repair being done at a shop your insurer approved? I'd want to make sure those boxes are fully checked before switching, because if there's any dispute about coverage or fault, you want to be able to resolve it while you're still technically a current customer.

    • 6
      hopeful-parent691

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 15
    humble-elk-829

    Ugh this would stress me out too. I hate that you even have to think about this on top of dealing with the accident itself. Hoping it all wraps up cleanly for you. Make sure someone you trust knows about the claim in case any paperwork shows up and you miss it!

    • 5
      grounded-backseat400

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 14
    gentle-swift-239

    Short answer: switch when you're ready. The claim doesn't disappear. Just get everything in writing before you go — confirm your claim number, the adjuster handling it, and ask them to note your new email or phone in the file. Then move on. Don't overpay premiums just out of worry about this.

  • 13
    bright-tern-727

    Worked in claims for years — your insurer is legally and contractually obligated to see the claim through regardless of whether you stay with them. That said, the honest truth is that subrogation recovery can be slow and it sometimes falls into a queue that nobody is urgently working. The good news is that your deductible reimbursement gets passed directly to you if they recover it, even after you've left. Just don't let them lose your new contact info.

    • 3
      careful-rider894

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

  • 9
    genuine-beaver-478

    I'd be cautious about assuming everything will go perfectly on autopilot. Once you're no longer a paying customer, you are absolutely lower priority to them. Not saying they'll drop the ball on purpose, but follow up regularly. Like, set a calendar reminder every few weeks to call and ask for a status update on the subrogation. Squeaky wheel gets the grease, especially with insurance companies.