The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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T-boned by a DoorDash driver — his personal insurance won't cover me. What now?

Still kind of in shock writing this, honestly.

So two days ago I'm driving home from work, totally normal evening. I'm going straight through a green light and out of nowhere a guy blows through the cross street and slams right into my driver's side. Airbags, glass, the whole thing. His fault 100% — he ran a red and got cited on the spot.

Here's the wrinkle I didn't see coming: turns out he was actively on a DoorDash delivery when it happened. Food still in the car and everything.

I called his personal auto insurer first thing the next morning. They were almost weirdly quick to tell me his policy has a livery exclusion — basically said since he was working a gig delivery at the time, they're washing their hands of it. Just like that.

So now I've filed a claim directly with DoorDash's insurance, and I'm just... waiting. They gave me a claim number and said to expect a few business days before anyone even looks at it. Meanwhile my car is sitting at a tow yard racking up fees and I have no rental.

Physically I felt okay at the scene but woke up yesterday with a really stiff neck and pain across my upper back. Going to urgent care this afternoon — I know I need to get that documented.

I've never dealt with anything like this. A few people have mentioned that gig-economy accidents specifically are complicated because there are multiple insurance layers involved and companies that fight over who owes what. Someone told me it might be worth talking to a personal injury attorney early, but I don't really know what that would even do for me at this stage.

Has anyone been through something like this? What should I be doing right now that I might not be thinking of?

13replies

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13 replies

  • 12
    humble-marmot-201

    I went through almost this exact situation about a year and a half ago — gig driver, similar runaround with the personal insurer. The thing nobody told me is that the gig company's insurer will try to move slowly hoping you get frustrated and settle fast. Don't. Document everything — every call, every email, every symptom. It pays off later.

    • 10
      genuine-kestrel-160

      Former auto claims adjuster here. The livery exclusion thing is real and totally standard — don't waste energy fighting that angle. Your fight is with the gig company's commercial policy, and those policies do exist and are usually substantial. What the gig company's adjuster will try to do early on is get a recorded statement from you. Politely decline or at least delay until you know the full extent of your injuries. Recorded statements are used to lock you into saying you feel 'okay' before your back and neck symptoms fully develop — which, by the way, often takes 48-72 hours. Sounds like you're already there.

  • 22
    swift-bison-288

    Really glad you're going to urgent care today. Soft tissue injuries to the neck and upper back after a side-impact collision can genuinely take two or three days to fully declare themselves — the adrenaline at the scene masks a lot. Make sure you describe all your symptoms specifically and don't downplay anything. Ask them to document the mechanism of injury (T-bone collision, driver's side) because that context matters for your records down the line.

    • 0
      gentle-neighbor418

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

  • 12
    warm-seal-896

    Do NOT let the gig company's adjuster charm you into thinking you're all on the same team. Their job is to close your claim as cheaply as possible. They will be friendly, they will call often, and they will make an early offer that sounds decent before you really know how hurt you are. Just be cautious.

  • 14
    swift-seal-327

    Not legal advice, but from what I've seen — gig delivery accidents genuinely are more complex than standard two-car crashes because you're navigating overlapping policy layers and a corporate entity with its own legal team. Consulting a PI attorney sooner rather than later doesn't mean you're being litigious; it just means you understand the field you're playing on. Most will do a free consult. Worth a call once you have your medical visit done.

    • 6
      weary-parent861

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

    • 17
      mellow-grouse-007

      Quick question — did the police report actually list him as being on an active delivery at the time? Or is that something you found out separately? The reason I ask is that the gig company's coverage can sometimes depend on whether he was actively assigned to a delivery vs. just logged into the app, and that distinction actually matters for which tier of their policy kicks in. Worth confirming what the report says.

  • 19
    quiet-crow-939

    A couple of practical things: get the tow yard fees in writing and keep every receipt — those are often recoverable damages. Also, when you file with the gig company's insurer, ask specifically whether they have a dedicated rep for your claim and get a direct contact. These large commercial claims can get lost in the shuffle otherwise. And yes, please don't give any recorded statements yet.

    • 8
      weary-survivor271

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

    • 3
      weathered-offramp100

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

  • 13
    cool-fox-366

    I just want to say — please take care of yourself first. The car stuff and insurance stuff will get sorted, but you getting checked out and actually resting matters more than any of the logistics right now. I hope your neck and back are okay. Sending good thoughts your way.

  • 13
    humble-crane-769

    Three things, in order: (1) urgent care today, get everything on paper, (2) stop talking to any insurance adjuster — gig company's included — until you at least know your diagnosis, (3) call a PI lawyer for a free consult this week. That's it. Everything else can wait a day or two.