The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insuranceswift-crow-634

Tapped someone's bumper at low speed — bracing for my insurance bill going up 😬

So this happened yesterday and I'm still kind of shaken up even though it was minor. I was slowing down at a yellow light and the pickup in front of me stopped way more suddenly than I expected. I hit the brakes but couldn't stop in time and just barely kissed his rear bumper. Like, I was probably going 5 mph max.

The other driver got out, we looked at it together, his truck had a small scuff and my front end has literally zero damage. We exchanged info, I was honest and said it was my fault, and we kept it civil. He said he'd let me know if he wanted to file anything.

Here's the thing — I've been driving for almost 12 years and this is genuinely my first at-fault anything. Not even a parking lot ding. My record has been spotless.

I have a pretty solid policy with comprehensive and collision coverage, and I've been with the same carrier since forever. Does a clean prior history actually matter when they recalculate your rate? Like will they cut me any slack, or does one little fender tap automatically trigger a big jump?

Also — if his truck ends up being fine and he never files a claim, does it still affect my premium just because I reported it? I called my insurer to give them a heads up but didn't formally file a claim yet.

Anyone been through something like this? I really don't want my monthly payment ballooning over something so minor. Any real-world experience here would mean a lot right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 13
    hearty-swan-997

    Been exactly here. First at-fault in 10 years, similar low-speed thing in a parking lot. Honestly the rate increase wasn't as catastrophic as I feared — mine went up but not dramatically, and after three years it basically disappeared. Your long clean record genuinely does count for something with most carriers.

    • 13
      kind-swan-574

      Whatever you do, don't volunteer more information to your insurer than necessary. I've seen people call to 'give a heads up' and end up essentially handing the adjuster material to work with. You did the right thing exchanging info at the scene, but be careful how many follow-up conversations you have before you know whether a claim is even being filed.

    • 5
      weary-wanderer268

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

  • 9
    cool-marten-933

    Former adjuster here. A few things worth knowing: just reporting something to your carrier doesn't automatically trigger a surcharge — it's usually only when a claim is actually paid out that your rate gets affected. That said, if the other guy files against your policy later, the clock starts then. Also, many companies have a first-accident forgiveness feature baked into longer-tenured policies, so it's worth specifically asking your agent if that applies to you. Don't assume it does, but don't assume it doesn't either.

  • 17
    daring-beaver-189

    Honestly? Wait and see if he even files. A scuff on a pickup bumper might just sand and buff out and you never hear from him again. No claim paid = often no rate change. You're stressing over something that might be a total non-event.

    • 1
      weary-parent492

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

  • 17
    mellow-dove-431

    The way surcharges typically work is they're tied to claim payouts, not just incidents being reported. If nothing gets paid, many carriers won't ding your rate at all — though they may note the incident in your file. It's also worth pulling your policy documents and looking for any 'accident forgiveness' language. Some carriers apply it automatically after a certain number of years, others you have to opt in. Either way, a direct question to your agent will get you a clearer answer than guessing.

    • 7
      hopeful-traveler583

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

  • 5
    genuine-raven-278

    Ugh, I'd be so stressed too. Glad nobody got hurt though, that's the most important thing. Hope it all just quietly goes away for you 🤞

  • 16
    patient-vole-498

    Did you get anything in writing at the scene? Like even a text from him saying he'd let you know? 'Keeping it civil' is great until someone wakes up the next morning with a sore neck and suddenly the story changes. I'm not trying to scare you, just — do you have documentation of the conversation?

    • 14
      daring-stoat-936

      12 years with zero incidents is actually a really strong position to be in. Even if there's a small rate bump, you've probably saved thousands over the years compared to someone with a spotty record. One minor blip doesn't erase all that goodwill with your carrier.