The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
brave-swift-061

Two at-fault accidents in one year and now my insurer is dropping me — any hope?

I'll be honest with myself here because I think that's the only way to get useful feedback.

I had two accidents this year where I was the one who caused them. Neither was a multi-car highway pileup or anything dramatic — honestly both were low-speed, parking-lot-type situations where I wasn't paying close enough attention. But they happened, claims were filed, money was paid out, and now my insurance company sent me a letter basically saying they won't be renewing my policy when it expires in a few weeks.

I totally get why. I'm not angry at them. I'm just... stressed about what comes next.

My car is older — nothing fancy, probably worth less than a used couch at this point — so I only need liability coverage. I'm not trying to protect the car itself, I just need to be legal on the road and not financially destroyed if I bump into someone again.

I've heard there are "non-standard" or "high-risk" insurance markets out there. Is that a real thing? Has anyone actually gone through this and come out the other side with something affordable? I live in a pretty rural area so not having a car isn't really an option for me — I need to drive to work.

Also wondering: does having two at-fault claims follow me around forever, or does it eventually age off my record? Like is there a light at the end of this tunnel or am I just a pariah to insurers for the foreseeable future?

Not looking for judgment — just real talk from people who've dealt with insurance nightmares.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 9
    calm-hare-732

    I went through something similar a couple years back — not two at-fault accidents, but I had one at-fault plus an unrelated claim and got non-renewed too. The non-standard market is absolutely real. I ended up with a smaller regional carrier I'd never heard of. Premiums were higher than I wanted, but it was workable. Shopped through an independent insurance broker (not a captive agent tied to one company) and that made a huge difference — they have access to a bunch of carriers at once and can find someone willing to take you.

    • 9
      mellow-lynx-608

      Yes, high-risk insurance pools exist. Yes, it will cost more. Yes, it does eventually age off — typically 3-5 years depending on your state, though that varies. Your move right now: call an independent broker, not a brand-name company's direct line. They shop multiple markets. Also, defensive driving courses sometimes get you a discount even with a rough record — worth asking about.

    • 15
      kind-raven-422

      From the inside, two at-fault claims in under 12 months is basically a hard flag in the underwriting system — it's not personal, it's just a risk-scoring thing. Most big national carriers will decline or price you out. But the non-standard market genuinely exists for exactly this situation. SR-22 filings are sometimes required for high-risk drivers depending on your state, so ask any broker you talk to whether that applies to you. It's not the end of the world if it does — just an extra form your insurer files with the DMV.

    • 1
      restless-co-pilot993

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

  • 10
    wise-finch-741

    One thing I'd flag: when you're shopping around, be really upfront about both accidents on every application. I know that sounds obvious, but some people are tempted to be vague hoping it won't show up. It WILL show up on your CLUE report (that's the claims history database insurers check). If they find a discrepancy they can rescind your policy later, which is so much worse than just paying higher premiums now.

    • 15
      humble-mole-010

      To answer your "does it follow me forever" question — most at-fault accidents drop off your driving record in 3 to 5 years, and your CLUE report (the claims history insurers check) typically goes back 5-7 years. So no, it's not permanent. It does affect your rates during that window though. One thing to consider: once both accidents are a few years old, shop aggressively again because your pricing should come down meaningfully. Keep records of everything in the meantime.

    • 8
      tired-survivor753

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

  • 8
    bold-crow-104

    That sounds really stressful, especially when you're already owning up to what happened. I hope you find something affordable. The rural thing is real — not having a car just isn't an option for a lot of people and I think sometimes people forget that.

    • 4
      level-road-soul233

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 5
    kind-wren-535

    Honestly the fact that you're being this clear-eyed about it is a good sign. A lot of people in your spot would be blaming the other car for "being parked wrong" or whatever lol. You own it, you're solving it — that's the move. You'll get covered, it'll just take a little legwork.

    • 7
      kind-optimist772

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