The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
clever-sparrow-401

Two agents gave me totally opposite answers about my rate going up — anyone dealt with this?

So I had the most embarrassing minor accident last week. Pulled forward out of a tight parking spot at a grocery store and clipped the rear corner of the SUV next to me. We're talking a small scuff and a tiny dent the size of a golf ball. The other driver was super nice about it, we exchanged info, no police report.

Here's the thing — I reported it to my insurer just to be safe, and then I called twice to ask whether my premium would actually go up. The first rep I talked to basically told me to expect a significant rate hike at my next renewal, no matter what. The second rep pulled up my history and seemed way more relaxed about it, said my record would likely work in my favor.

For context: I've been driving for about 19 years. I had one minor at-fault fender bender roughly 12 years ago with a different carrier. Since switching to my current insurer about 8 years ago, zero claims, zero accidents. One speeding ticket from maybe 6 years back, that's it.

I'm honestly a pretty careful driver and this just really stings. The repair estimate the other driver sent me is way higher than I expected for such a small ding — feels like I'm being penalized twice.

Has anyone actually gone through a rate review after a small at-fault claim with a clean long-term history? Did your rates jump, stay flat, or go up just a little? I'm trying to decide if I should just pay the repair out of pocket to avoid any claim on my record at all. Would love to hear real experiences.

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10 replies

  • 18
    candid-badger-525

    At least the other driver was decent about it and you handled it honestly — that matters more than people realize. And if your history really is as clean as you described, you're in the best possible position to minimize the fallout. This will be a distant memory by next year.

    • 2
      soft-spoken-offramp940

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 16
    tidy-finch-554

    I'd be really careful about assuming the friendly second rep's answer is the one that matters. Phone reps don't set your rates — the underwriting system does at renewal. I've seen people get reassured on the phone and then open their renewal letter to a nasty surprise. If paying out of pocket is financially feasible for you, it might genuinely be worth doing the math before you let this ride as a claim.

    • 12
      gentle-raven-984

      Did you actually get a copy of the repair estimate, or just the dollar figure the other driver mentioned? Because that number can balloon fast once a body shop gets involved and starts finding 'additional damage.' I'd want to see an itemized estimate before I even decided how to handle this.

  • 16
    mellow-raven-847

    Ugh, this sounds so stressful for what was genuinely a tiny accident. I hope it works out to be less of a hit than you're fearing. You've clearly been a really responsible driver for a long time — seems unfair that one small slip in a parking lot should torpedo that.

  • 14
    wise-raven-419

    Former adjuster here. The two-agents-two-answers thing is super common and it's not them lying — it's that rate calculations involve a lot of variables that a phone rep can't fully see in real time. What I'd suggest: ask specifically about your company's 'accident forgiveness' policy. A lot of carriers have it baked in after a certain number of years with no claims, and long-term customers often qualify without even realizing it. Worth asking directly instead of just asking 'will my rates go up.'

  • 12
    swift-badger-099

    Get the exact repair estimate in writing before you decide anything. If the number is close to or below your deductible, paying out of pocket is almost always the smarter move — no claim means no record, full stop. If it's well above your deductible, then you're really just weighing a known cost now against an unknown rate bump later.

    • 8
      clever-kestrel-397

      One thing people don't always think about: even if you pay out of pocket directly to the other driver, make sure you get a signed release from them stating the matter is settled and they won't come back with additional claims. It doesn't have to be fancy — a simple written statement with both signatures and the date is enough. Without that, you're still exposed if they change their mind.

  • 9
    daring-fox-116

    I went through almost the exact same thing two years ago — tiny parking lot bump, filed a claim because I wasn't sure what else to do, then immediately regretted it when I started worrying about rates. Honestly my renewal came around and the increase was pretty small, way less than I feared. I think having a long clean history genuinely does cushion you. Still annoying though, I totally feel your frustration.

    • 2
      kind-survivor925

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.