The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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curious-beaver-727

Tapped a parked car in a crowded lot — left my info, now I'm spiraling

So this happened yesterday at a grocery store with one of those impossible parking situations where everyone's crammed in way too tight. I was backing out slowly and just barely grazed the SUV next to me. Like, I felt it more than heard it. Got out immediately, checked both vehicles — my bumper has a small scuff, theirs has what looks like a light scratch along the rear quarter panel.

I wrote my name and number on a piece of paper and tucked it under their wiper blade. Nobody was around. I also took photos of both cars, the contact note on their windshield, and the general scene before I left.

Here's where my brain is in overdrive:

  • What if they claim way more damage than what actually happened?
  • Should I have called the police even though it seemed so minor?
  • Do I go through insurance or just try to handle it privately if they reach out?
  • Is there any chance this comes back at me worse because I left the scene, even though I left my info?

I know this isn't the end of the world but my anxiety is absolutely through the roof right now. I've never been in any kind of accident situation before and I don't know what's normal here. Did I do the right thing leaving my contact info? Has anyone else dealt with something like this and how did it play out?

Any perspective from people who've been through something similar would honestly mean a lot right now.

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10 replies

  • 16
    steady-lynx-072

    Leaving a note with your contact info is actually what the law requires in most states for exactly this kind of situation when the other driver isn't present — so you almost certainly handled it correctly. Whether police needed to be called usually depends on a damage threshold that varies by state, but for a minor scratch in a private lot, it's typically not required. The photos you took are genuinely valuable — keep them backed up somewhere.

  • 15
    patient-lynx-463

    Honestly the fact that you stopped, checked, left your info AND took photos says a lot about you. A lot of people would've just driven off. Whatever happens next, you did the right thing and that counts for something.

  • 12
    swift-beaver-922

    I used to work claims and this type of thing came across my desk constantly. Here's the reality: a scratch on a rear quarter panel can range from a cheap buff-out to a surprisingly expensive repaint depending on the color and whether there's any plastic deformation. If the other driver does contact you and the number sounds high, it's totally reasonable to ask for a written estimate before you agree to anything. Don't just Venmo someone because they sent you a scary number.

    • 16
      spry-raven-828

      How confident are you the scratch was actually from your car and not pre-existing? Parking lot scrapes are notorious for this. Did your photos happen to capture the other car's overall condition before the alleged contact point? That detail could matter a lot if this turns into a dispute.

  • 10
    silent-bison-398

    You took photos, you left your info, you didn't flee — you're fine. The documentation is the key thing here. If they try to claim damage that doesn't match your photos, you have evidence. Don't delete anything off your phone. And heads up: wait to see if they even contact you before you decide whether to loop in insurance. No point opening a claim if this resolves quietly.

    • 6
      steady-dreamer942

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 8
    wise-raven-479

    Breathe — I did almost the exact same thing in a parking garage about two years ago. Left my info on the car and was a wreck waiting for the call. Honestly? The other driver texted me, we looked at it together, and it turned out way less dramatic than I'd built it up to be in my head. You did the right thing leaving your contact info. That matters a lot, legally and just as a decent human.

    • 21
      kind-newt-009

      One thing I'd watch for: if you do go through insurance, even as the person who caused the damage, adjusters sometimes use these low-stakes situations to dig around for other things or flag you for rate increases. Know what you're signing up for before you report it. A small out-of-pocket settlement between you and the other driver might honestly be cleaner, assuming the damage is genuinely minor like you're describing.

    • 5
      quiet-rider398

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

  • 7
    hearty-swan-311

    Not legal advice, but for what it's worth — leaving your contact information in a situation like this is generally what's legally expected, and you did it. The photos are smart. If the other party comes back with damage claims that seem wildly out of proportion to what your photos show, that's worth talking to someone about before you pay anything. A lot of PI attorneys will do a free consult even for smaller situations.