The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
patient-tern-917

Tapped someone's bumper in a parking lot, they waved me off — am I still exposed?

So this happened a few days ago and I can't stop second-guessing myself.

I was pulling out of a tight parking spot at a grocery store and I barely kissed the rear corner of the car next to me. Like, genuinely couldn't even find a mark afterward. The other driver was loading her trunk, saw the whole thing, walked over and looked at both bumpers, said "oh don't even worry about it, seriously" and went back to loading her groceries. She drove off before I could even offer my info — I don't think she even glanced at my plate.

No information was exchanged. No photos taken (by either of us). Nothing.

Here's what's eating at me:

  • What if she gets home and notices something I didn't see?
  • What if she decides to file a claim days or weeks later?
  • Could she somehow track me down through the parking lot cameras?
  • Should I have filed something with my insurance proactively?

I know it feels resolved, but I've heard stories about people coming back after the fact and suddenly having a sore neck or whatever. My state requires you to report accidents over a certain damage threshold — this was clearly under it, but how would I even prove that later?

I don't have a dashcam (getting one ASAP now). I didn't write anything down at the time. Feeling kind of exposed even though logically it seems fine.

Has anyone been in a situation like this? Did it just... go away? Or did something come back to bite you?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    steady-tern-259

    Almost identical thing happened to me in a coffee shop drive-through. Tapped the car ahead, guy got out, laughed it off, left. Never heard a word about it and it's been over a year. I think when the damage is genuinely nothing and both parties saw it in the moment, people move on. That said, I did write down the time, location, and a description of the other car that same night just so I had something if it ever came up. Wish I'd taken a quick photo too.

    • 13
      keen-swift-700

      The thing people don't realize is that even if she was totally sincere in the moment, a few days later she might mention it to her husband or a friend who says "wait, you should file a claim anyway" and suddenly it becomes a thing. I'm not saying it WILL happen — just that you're not fully in the clear until the statute of limitations runs out in your state, which could be a year or more for property damage. Doesn't mean panic, just means stay aware.

    • 14
      bold-beaver-620

      Honestly, this sounds like one of those rare situations where a potentially annoying thing just... resolved itself with basic human decency. She saw it, she checked, she made a call. Try to trust that. The fact that you're being conscientious enough to even ask these questions suggests you'd handle it responsibly if anything did come up.

    • 14
      sharp-grouse-008

      Ugh, this kind of thing would keep me up at night too even if logically it's probably fine. The uncertainty is the worst part. Sounds like she genuinely wasn't bothered — some people really do just let small stuff go. Sending you calm vibes, honestly.

  • 20
    bright-otter-009

    A couple of practical things worth knowing: property damage and personal injury claims have separate statutes of limitations, and in most states the personal injury window is longer. That's the one that makes people nervous in low-speed situations — the "I didn't think I was hurt but now my neck hurts" scenario. Not trying to alarm you, just flagging it so you understand why folks say you're not 100% in the clear immediately. Write down everything you remember — time, location, car color/make, what she said, what you both looked at. Even a text to yourself works as a timestamped record.

    • 5
      steady-parent896

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

    • 7
      level-co-pilot294

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 19
    careful-crane-224

    Worked claims for years. Honestly, late-reported minor parking lot incidents happen, but they're also really hard for the claimant to push through without evidence. If she has no photos, no police report, no damage visible on her car, and no witnesses beyond herself, any adjuster is going to scrutinize that hard. The fact that she waved you off and left works in your favor if something ever did come up — it speaks to her state of mind at the scene. I wouldn't lose sleep, but jot down everything you remember right now while it's fresh. Notes with timestamps hold up better than you'd think.

  • 18
    patient-swan-650

    How slow are we talking, and what kind of vehicles? Because "barely kissed" means different things depending on whether you're in a small sedan or an SUV with a tow hitch. Not doubting you — just that the actual physics matter a lot if this ever got revisited.

  • 9
    plain-crow-492

    From a medical side — at very low speeds in a parking lot, real injury is pretty unlikely, but it's not impossible if someone was already dealing with a prior condition. That said, soft tissue claims without any contemporaneous documentation are genuinely difficult. The fact that she was physically active loading groceries right after and showed zero sign of distress is meaningful context. I'd keep a note of that detail.

    • 16
      gentle-kestrel-100

      Write it down tonight. Everything. Time, place, weather, what she looked like, what she said word for word, what both bumpers looked like. Then buy a dashcam this weekend — they're like $60 and they end so much drama before it starts. That's really all you can do at this point. Worrying without acting is just burning energy.

    • 1
      level-mile-marker915

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.