The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
Insuranceclear-otter-333

Tapped in a parking lot, zero visible damage — do I even bother telling insurance?

So this happened about four days ago. I was sitting at a red light near a shopping center when a pickup edged forward and nudged my rear bumper. We both pulled over, looked at it together, and honestly could not find a single scratch. The other driver was apologetic, we exchanged info, and that was pretty much it.

Here's where I'm second-guessing myself: I didn't call the police because it seemed so minor and the officer I spoke to briefly on the phone basically told me it wasn't worth their time to come out for something with no visible damage. Okay, fine.

But now I'm sitting here three days later and my lower back has been a little achy. Probably nothing — I sit at a desk all day anyway — but it's got me wondering. And beyond the physical stuff, I genuinely don't know if I'm supposed to notify my insurance company even when there's no repair bill, no police report, nothing.

Things I'm worried about:

  • If I file, do my rates automatically go up even if the other driver was 100% at fault?
  • If I don't file and something comes up later (with my back or with hidden bumper damage), am I just out of luck?
  • Does the other driver's insurance even know this happened, or could they act like it never did?

I'm not trying to make a big deal out of nothing. I just don't want to do the wrong thing and end up screwed six months from now. Has anyone dealt with something this low-key and figured out the right move? Would really appreciate any real-world experience here.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 20
    warm-finch-805

    Most policies have a duty-to-report clause that requires you to notify your insurer of any accident within a reasonable timeframe — sometimes it's as short as 24-72 hours, sometimes longer. If you wait too long and something comes up later, the carrier could try to use the delay against you. I'm not saying panic, just don't sit on it too long. Even a quick call or online incident report buys you protection.

  • 18
    quick-vole-504

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking: if there's any physical symptom at all — even a mild ache you're not sure about — that changes the calculus significantly. Bodily injury claims have statutes of limitations and you want documentation started as early as possible. The 'it's probably nothing' instinct is very human but can really hurt you later. At minimum, see a doctor and keep notes about when symptoms started and how they felt.

  • 18
    warm-mole-743

    Take photos of your bumper today if you haven't already. Send a quick text to the other driver referencing what happened so you have a timestamped record of them acknowledging it. Call your insurance, tell them what happened, ask how to log it without opening a claim. Done. Thirty minutes of your time now could save you a massive headache later.

    • 7
      level-offramp831

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 12
    curious-swift-503

    How fast were you actually going when impact happened? And did you get the other driver's insurance card, or just their name and number? Those details matter a lot for what your options look like.

    • 10
      calm-wanderer667

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 9
    gentle-grouse-367

    Spent years on the inside handling these. A few things: (1) Filing a not-at-fault claim through the other person's liability coverage generally should not affect your own rates — though it varies by state and policy, so read your declarations page. (2) 'No visible damage' does not mean no damage. Bumpers are designed to absorb impact and can have cracked brackets or foam underneath that you'd never see without pulling the cover off. (3) There's a difference between notifying your insurer and opening a claim. You can do the first without automatically triggering the second. Call your agent, explain what happened, and ask how to log it without a formal claim.

  • 8
    candid-beaver-131

    Here's the thing nobody tells you: even if you don't file, the other driver might. And if they file first and you haven't reported anything, suddenly you're playing catch-up with an adjuster who already has one side of the story. Notify your own carrier that an incident occurred — you don't have to open a full claim right away, just put them on notice. Protect yourself.

    • 9
      curious-wanderer771

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

  • 7
    warm-wolf-597

    Please don't brush off the back ache. I work in urgent care and we see this all the time — soft tissue injuries from low-speed impacts can take days to fully show up because your adrenaline masks it at the scene. If it's still bothering you by the end of the week, get checked out and make sure the visit is documented as accident-related. That paper trail matters more than people realize.

    • 9
      calm-traveler898

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 6
    candid-badger-893

    I was in almost this exact situation last year — minor bump, no visible damage, felt fine at the scene. I decided not to report it. Two weeks later my neck started acting up and when I tried to open a claim I basically had to fight to prove the accident even happened. No report, no contemporaneous photos, nothing. Lesson learned the hard way: document everything even when it feels like overkill.

  • 6
    warm-finch-910

    The good news is you caught this early enough that all your options are still open. You have the other person's info, the incident is recent, and you're already asking the right questions. A lot of people come here after waiting months and the situation is so much harder to untangle by then. You're ahead of the curve — just take the next small step and you'll be fine.