The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Medical & injuriesclever-otter-039

I tapped someone at a red light and now I'm terrified they're faking injuries

So this happened a few weeks ago and I genuinely can't stop thinking about it. I was pulling up to a red light and misjudged my stopping distance. I bumped the car in front of me — we're talking maybe 3-4 mph, barely a nudge. The other driver got out, looked at their car, didn't seem upset, we exchanged info and went our separate ways. No ambulance, no police report, everyone seemed totally fine.

Fast forward to last week — my insurance calls me and says the other driver is now claiming neck and back injuries and has hired an attorney. I'm honestly floored. The contact was so minor that I didn't even see their car move forward. There's not a scratch on either bumper that I could see.

Here's what's really eating at me: I don't have a massive policy. I've been reading horror stories about people getting sued beyond their policy limits and having wages garnished or assets taken. I'm a regular person, I have a mortgage, I'm not some corporation with deep pockets.

Has anyone actually been through something like this where someone claimed serious injuries from a genuinely minor tap? Did it ever go to a lawsuit? Did the insurance company handle it or did you end up personally exposed?

I feel like I'm catastrophizing but I also feel like I can't just ignore this. Any experience or perspective would really help right now.

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12 replies

  • 19
    swift-fox-441

    A couple of practical things: first, don't talk to the other driver or their attorney directly — route everything through your insurance. Second, write down everything you remember about the incident right now while it's relatively fresh — your speed, road conditions, what was said, what you observed about the other driver's behavior afterward. You may need that later and memory fades fast.

    • 6
      honest-commuter883

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

  • 18
    quick-wren-260

    Not legal advice, but — your insurance company has a duty to defend you up to your policy limits. That means they pay for the attorney, they handle the negotiation, you don't go it alone. Where personal exposure can happen is if a judgment exceeds your limits and the insurer is found to have acted in bad faith by refusing a reasonable settlement offer. That's a specific scenario, not the automatic outcome. If you're genuinely worried, a free consult with a personal injury attorney (from your side) can clarify your real risk.

  • 14
    cool-fox-468

    I'd be freaking out too, honestly. This sounds so stressful and unfair. I hope your insurance company steps up and handles this the way they're supposed to. You paid your premiums for exactly this reason.

  • 13
    bold-badger-692

    Stop Googling worst-case scenarios at midnight. Seriously. Call your insurance company, confirm they've assigned a claims adjuster, confirm they're providing a defense attorney if it goes that far, and then step back and let the process work. You carrying stress about this every day won't change the outcome one bit.

  • 11
    brave-wren-622

    Just want to add — low-speed collisions can cause real pain, especially in people who already have spinal issues they didn't know about. I'm not saying this person is being honest, I genuinely don't know, but "it was barely a tap" and "they couldn't possibly be hurt" aren't always the same thing. Bodies are weird. That said, the degree of claimed injury should be proportionate to the mechanism, and that's what medical reviewers and attorneys look at.

  • 9
    silent-fox-862

    Did you actually document the damage at the scene? Photos? Because if you have timestamped photos showing minimal or no damage, that's going to be really important. Also — was there actually no police report at all? That could matter too. Just asking because 'it was a tiny tap' is easy to say but evidence is what actually counts.

    • 1
      grounded-sidewalk111

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 7
    silent-otter-042

    I was on the other side of a very similar situation — I was the one tapped at a light, and I promise you not everyone is faking. I actually did have some pre-existing neck stuff that got aggravated. That said, the claim got settled through insurance without any lawsuit. A lot of these things resolve without ever going to court, even when attorneys get involved early.

    • 13
      curious-vole-738

      Okay so here's something people don't realize — when an attorney contacts your insurance company, adjusters sometimes get very motivated to settle fast and cheap, without really fighting for you. That's not always in YOUR best interest either. Make sure you actually understand what your policy covers and what your insurer's obligations to defend you are. Read your declarations page carefully.

  • 7
    keen-marmot-766

    Worked in claims for years. Low-speed impacts with soft tissue injury claims are incredibly common and they are also genuinely complicated to evaluate. Soft tissue injuries don't always show up on imaging but they can be real. That said, the severity of the impact absolutely gets factored in during negotiations. Your insurer will likely pull an accident reconstruction estimate based on the damage, and that matters. Don't assume you're automatically on the hook for big money just because someone hired a lawyer.

    • 10
      gentle-wanderer781

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.