The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
clear-wolf-917

Tapped someone's bumper, panicked and drove off — now terrified. Do I turn myself in?

I'm really spiraling right now and need to hear from people who've dealt with messy accident situations.

This afternoon I was pulling out of a parking garage and barely nudged the rear corner of an SUV that was moving slowly through the lane. We're talking a really low-speed tap — I didn't even see a mark on their vehicle. The other driver just kind of waved me off, didn't stop, and kept driving. So I did too.

Here's the problem: I don't have a valid license right now. It expired a few months ago and I just haven't gotten around to renewing it — I know, I know. That's on me.

Now I'm sitting here running through every worst-case scenario:

  • What if that driver goes home and notices a scratch and calls the cops?
  • Could this be considered a hit-and-run even though they seemed fine with it and kept going?
  • If I call the non-emergency police line and report it myself, does that help me or just hand them a reason to cite me for the expired license?
  • Does my insurance even matter here since I don't have a plate number or any info on the other car?

I didn't get their plate. It happened fast and I just wasn't thinking. I do have liability coverage on my car, for whatever that's worth.

I genuinely don't know if the 'right' thing to do legally is also the smart thing to do for my situation. Has anyone been in something like this? What actually happened? I'm not trying to dodge responsibility — I just don't want to make this ten times worse by doing the wrong thing.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 20
    quick-owl-570

    From my time working claims, the truth is that the vast majority of super-minor parking lot and low-speed contacts never get reported by either party. The other driver waving you off and continuing on is actually a pretty telling sign they weren't too concerned. That said, if they do file a claim later, the fact that you didn't stop and didn't have a valid license will absolutely come up and complicate things. Document everything you remember right now — time, location, what the vehicles looked like, what happened — even just in a note on your phone. If this ever becomes a he-said/she-said situation, your own contemporaneous notes matter.

    • 9
      tired-passenger241

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

    • 0
      soft-spoken-backseat770

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 19
    warm-grouse-701

    Okay, real talk: the expired license thing is annoying but it's usually a fix-it ticket, not a criminal charge, at least for a first offense in most places. The hit-and-run angle is actually the bigger concern. If the other driver did note your plate and files a report, you want to have already called it in yourself. Waiting makes you look like you were hiding. Make the call today, not tomorrow.

    • 11
      curious-seal-642

      Not legal advice, but generally speaking there's a meaningful difference between a hit-and-run and a minor contact where both parties effectively continued on. Whether it rises to the level of a reportable accident often depends on the dollar threshold for property damage in your state. That said, the unlicensed driving issue is a separate problem that could follow you regardless of the accident itself. I'd strongly suggest a quick consultation with a local attorney before you do anything — many offer free 15-minute calls. Don't just guess on this one.

  • 16
    kind-marmot-111

    I'd be careful about calling your insurance company to ask hypothetical questions about this. The moment you describe the incident to them, that can be treated as a notice of claim and it goes on your record. Talk to a lawyer first if you're going to loop in insurance at all.

  • 12
    warm-dove-048

    I know this is mostly a legal question but honestly — the stress you're carrying right now is real and it's going to mess with your sleep and your whole week if you don't resolve the uncertainty. Whatever you decide, decide it today and then let yourself breathe. The not-knowing is often worse than the actual outcome.

    • 2
      steady-commuter741

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 12
    brave-otter-698

    A few questions that would change my take on this: Did the other driver actually make eye contact with you after the tap, or are you assuming they saw you and were fine with it? And how expired is expired — like two months or two years? Those details matter a lot for how seriously this could get treated.

  • 10
    wise-crane-902

    I had a situation a while back where I left the scene of a fender-bender because the other person drove away first and I panicked. I ended up calling the non-emergency line myself about an hour later just to have a record. Nothing ever came of it — no charges, no follow-up. I honestly think self-reporting showed good faith and it probably helped that the contact was so minor. That said, I had a valid license, so your situation is a bit different.

    • 1
      gentle-walker580

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 7
    candid-vole-508

    A couple of things worth knowing: most states require you to report an accident to the DMV if damage exceeds a certain threshold (sometimes as low as a few hundred dollars). Parking garage incidents can be tricky because there's often camera footage you don't know about. If the garage is attached to a business or apartment complex, they almost certainly have cameras. That's not meant to scare you — it's just worth factoring in when you decide whether to get ahead of this or not. Self-reporting generally looks better than being found out later.

    • 6
      curious-commuter577

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?