The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
kind-otter-793

Tapped at a stoplight — zero visible damage. Do I even bother reporting this?

So this happened yesterday morning on my way to work. I was fully stopped at a red light and the guy behind me rolled into me — not a hard hit, more like a slow bump. We both pulled into a nearby parking lot, checked out the vehicles, and honestly neither of us could find a scratch. Like, nothing. He was super apologetic and we ended up just exchanging numbers and going on our way.

No police were called because it seemed so minor. A couple coworkers told me I should've at least gotten a report, and now I'm second-guessing myself.

Here's where I'm at mentally:

  • My neck feels a tiny bit stiff today — probably nothing, but it's there
  • I don't want to file with insurance and watch my premium go up over something this small
  • But I also don't want to be in a bad spot if the stiffness turns into something real in a week
  • The other driver seems friendly now, but who knows if that changes

Is it even worth calling my insurer just to "notify" them without fully filing a claim? Does that distinction exist? And should I go get checked out by a doctor even if I feel mostly fine?

I feel kind of silly asking because the whole thing felt so minor in the moment, but my gut is telling me I should at least do something. Anyone dealt with a similar nothing-burger situation that turned into more than expected?

13replies

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13 replies

  • 21
    patient-wolf-804

    I was in almost this exact situation about two years ago. Tiny bump in a parking garage, both cars looked fine, we just waved each other off. About five days later my shoulder started aching badly — ended up being a soft tissue thing that took months of PT. I really wished I had at least called my insurance to give them a heads up. Even a quick notification call with no formal claim can matter later.

  • 7
    patient-badger-941

    Please don't brush off that neck stiffness. Whiplash-type injuries are notorious for showing up after the adrenaline wears off — sometimes 24 to 72 hours later. You don't need to be dramatic about it, just go get a baseline check at urgent care or your regular doctor. Tell them exactly what happened and when the stiffness started. Having that visit documented means a lot if things escalate. Better to have it and not need it.

    • 9
      calm-wanderer791

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

  • 8
    sharp-lynx-573

    One thing people don't realize — if the other guy decides to file against YOU claiming injury, and you never reported it, you're walking into that situation completely cold. Your insurance company finds out about it from his side first, which is not a great look. Protect yourself first, worry about the premium stuff second.

  • 17
    clever-swan-995

    To answer your specific question: yes, most insurers do allow you to call and just 'report' without opening a formal claim. They'll log it as an incident. Whether or not that eventually affects your rates depends on your carrier and state — but in my experience, a no-claim notification rarely hits your premium the way an actual payout does. Call them, explain it was minor, and ask them to note it. That paper trail is for YOUR protection as much as theirs.

  • 9
    silent-stoat-263

    You'd also want to get that other driver's insurance info if you don't have it already — just a name and policy number. Right now you have a phone number, which is fine for friendly exchanges, but if that person becomes unresponsive later and you need to pursue anything, you'll want more than that. Text them today while the goodwill is still fresh and ask them to send it over 'just for records.'

  • 15
    spry-swift-828

    Three things. Go to the doctor — today if you can. Call your insurer to notify them — not to file, just to notify. And stop feeling silly about it. Minor bumps send people to PT all the time. The awkward two-minute phone call now beats a massive headache in six weeks.

    • 1
      curious-survivor984

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

    • 8
      plainspoken-backseat723

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 22
    genuine-otter-852

    Not legal advice, but this is worth saying: the window you have to pursue anything if an injury develops is governed by your state's statute of limitations, and some states have specific notice requirements too. None of that is urgent today, but the documentation you create right now — doctor visit notes, your insurer notification, a written account of what happened while it's fresh — becomes really important if your symptoms worsen. Don't make any decisions or sign anything if the other driver reaches back out asking you to 'keep it between us.'

    • 5
      plainspoken-mile-marker288

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

  • 7
    quick-crow-112

    Honestly the neck stiffness is what's getting me. That's your body telling you something. Please just go get looked at — even if it turns out to be totally fine, you'll feel better knowing. You're not being dramatic, you were in an accident.

    • 0
      honest-neighbor744

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