The Shoulder
The Shoulder
49
Insurancepatient-marmot-498

Tapped a parked car in a lot — owner wants cash, no insurance. What do I do?

Okay so I feel like an idiot. I was pulling out of a parking spot at the grocery store and clipped the front corner of the car next to me. Barely a love tap on my end — tiny scuff on my rear quarter panel — but their car has a cracked side mirror housing and some paint transfer on the bumper.

The owner happened to be walking out right as it happened (of course), so we exchanged info. He seems like a decent guy, not aggressive or anything. He texted me a quote from a body shop and is asking me to just pay him directly and keep insurance out of it. The number he's quoting feels reasonable for the damage I saw.

I get why he wants to avoid insurance — nobody wants their rates going up over something small. And honestly neither do I. But I keep thinking: what if I hand over the cash, he cashes it, and then two weeks later he comes back claiming his alignment is off or something and wants more money?

Is there a way to protect myself if I go the private route? Like should I write up some kind of simple agreement that says this payment covers all damage from this specific incident and he agrees not to pursue anything further? Would that even hold up?

Or am I overthinking this and should I just file a claim and let the insurance companies sort it out?

I've never dealt with anything like this before. Just want to handle it the right way without getting burned later. Any advice from people who've been through something similar would really help. 🙏

11replies

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11 replies

  • 19
    calm-vole-792

    Been in almost this exact situation a couple years back. I paid privately and it was fine — but I made sure to write up a really simple one-page release. Something like 'I, [his name], confirm receipt of $X as full and final settlement for all damage arising from the incident on [date] in [location], and agree not to pursue further claims.' Both of us signed it, I took a photo of it right there, and that was that. Never heard from him again. The written release is the key — don't skip that part.

  • 18
    tidy-bison-295

    Honestly the fact that he's being calm and reasonable about it is a good sign. Just make sure you protect yourself with something in writing before paying. You seem like you're handling this really maturely — a lot of people would've just driven off 😬

  • 17
    keen-crow-304

    Not legal advice, but a signed release with 'full and final settlement' language is generally enforceable for property damage in situations like this. The one risk with skipping insurance entirely is that if hidden damage shows up later (structural stuff that wasn't visible), you've already settled. For a minor parking lot bump that risk is usually pretty low, but it's worth knowing. If you have any doubt about the extent of the damage, filing a claim gives you a buffer. Again, not legal advice — just something to think through.

  • 16
    daring-swan-764

    Did you actually look closely at the damage before agreeing to anything? 'Cracked mirror housing and paint transfer' can sometimes be hiding more underneath depending on the angle of impact. I'd want to make sure the quote covers the full repair, not just the visible cosmetic stuff, before I signed anything or handed over cash. What did the body shop quote actually include?

    • 10
      tired-driver645

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 15
    clever-dove-887

    Spent years processing claims and honestly, a lot of small parking lot stuff like this gets handled privately without any issues. The main thing I saw go sideways was when people paid with zero documentation. Then the other party would file a claim anyway, sometimes weeks later, and the person who paid had no proof the damage was already addressed. A signed release with the payment amount spelled out closes that loop completely. Also — take photos of the damage before you pay, and again after if you can. Visual record matters.

  • 9
    swift-mole-778

    A written release really is your best friend here. It doesn't need to be fancy — courts have upheld super basic settlement agreements as long as the language clearly says it covers 'all claims arising from the incident' and both parties sign. I'd also suggest including the specific date, location, and a brief description of the vehicles involved just so there's no ambiguity about what incident you're referring to. Keep a copy for yourself, have him keep one, and you're in much better shape than just a Venmo transaction with no paper trail.

    • 11
      humble-bison-963

      Write the release, both sign it, pay him, move on. You're not overthinking the risk — the release is exactly how you manage it. Don't pay a single dollar without that paper signed first.

    • 0
      curious-rider980

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

  • 9
    tidy-newt-263

    Going private is fine if you get that release signed. But here's the thing — if you pay cash with no documentation and he later decides to file with his own insurance and claim you were uncooperative or fled the scene, you have nothing to back you up. Always protect yourself first, even when the other person seems chill.

    • 0
      patient-commuter412

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