The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
bright-tern-142

Two crashes in 48 hours — one disputed, one my fault. Now someone wants to settle off the books?

I genuinely cannot believe I'm typing this but I had two separate accidents within two days of each other and my brain is completely fried.

Crash #1 (two days ago): The other driver caused it — he rolled backward in a parking lot and tagged the side of my car while we were both maneuvering. When I said "you rolled into me" he immediately got defensive and started insisting it never happened that way. No witnesses, no cameras nearby. So now I'm just waiting to see how his version matches mine when the insurance companies sort it out. Feels helpless honestly.

Crash #2 (yesterday): Totally on me. I'll own it. I think I was so wound up from the day before that I just wasn't focused and I clipped someone's front end while backing out. Not proud of it.

Here's where it gets complicated. The second driver doesn't want to go through insurance. He tossed out a cash number on the spot — said it would cover the repair — but nobody has actually looked at the car yet. The figure felt reasonable at a glance, but I have zero idea what the actual damage assessment would be.

I'm also a little uneasy because I got a weird vibe about whether his car is properly covered for how he's using it. He was cagey when I asked about insurance and I don't want to find out later there's some wrinkle there.

So my questions:

  • Is settling privately on a minor fender-bender ever actually safe?
  • What happens if he comes back later saying the damage was worse than the number he quoted me?
  • Does having two claims in two days totally destroy my rates even if one wasn't my fault?

Any advice from people who've been here would mean a lot right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 18
    daring-swift-885

    A couple of process things that might help you think this through. First, most insurance policies actually require you to report accidents promptly — check your policy's cooperation clause, because failing to report could technically give your insurer grounds to deny coverage if something comes up later. Second, on the disputed first accident: document everything now while it's fresh. Write down the exact sequence of events, draw a little diagram if you can, note the time and weather, anything. If it goes to a he-said/she-said liability determination, your contemporaneous notes carry more weight than you'd think.

  • 17
    gentle-otter-913

    Just want to check in on you for a second. Two accidents back to back is a lot of adrenaline and cortisol hitting your system in a short window. Even if you feel fine physically, that kind of stress can mask soreness that shows up 48-72 hours later — neck and upper back especially. Please don't brush off any stiffness as just stress. If anything flares up, see someone and get it documented, even if it turns out to be nothing.

    • 5
      grounded-backseat311

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

  • 13
    cool-wolf-733

    The part that would make me nervous is that he threw out a number before anyone looked at the damage. That's a classic setup for a second ask. You pay the $X, he gets the estimate, suddenly there's "hidden damage" and he's back wanting more — and now you have no insurance company backing you up because you kept them out of it.

  • 11
    tidy-elk-693

    For whatever it's worth — you're asking the right questions instead of just panicking and agreeing to whatever he said. A lot of people in the moment just say yes to make it go away and regret it. The fact that you're pausing and thinking it through is genuinely the right move.

    • 7
      curious-rider533

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

  • 10
    calm-mole-691

    How much actual visible damage is on his car? Like are we talking a scuffed bumper or a cracked panel? Because "sounds about right" and a real body shop estimate can be very different things. I'd want to know what I'm actually paying for before I handed over anything.

  • 7
    daring-bison-822

    Not legal advice, but the thing I'd flag is the "cagey about insurance" detail. If his vehicle isn't properly insured or isn't covered for commercial use and he gets hurt — even a soft-tissue thing he doesn't mention now — a signed release is your only real protection. Without it, you're exposed. Most PI attorneys offer free consultations and can tell you in 15 minutes whether your situation has any wrinkles worth worrying about.

  • 5
    warm-otter-058

    Do NOT pay that guy a dime without a signed release first. Seriously. A handshake deal with no paperwork means he can pocket your cash and still file a claim or come after you later claiming injury. If you're going to go off-insurance, at minimum get a written settlement release that says he's accepting the payment as full satisfaction and waives any future claims. Get it notarized if you can.

    • 11
      keen-wolf-518

      Worked in auto claims for years. Private settlements happen all the time and they're not inherently sketchy, BUT the risk is entirely on you when you go that route. If there's any injury — even one he doesn't mention now — he can still pursue a bodily injury claim later unless you have that signed release. Also, depending on your state, you may have a legal obligation to report accidents above a certain damage threshold regardless of how you handle the money side. Worth looking up your state's requirements.

    • 15
      bright-stoat-618

      The two-in-two-days thing is so real, I went through something similar after a rough rear-end — I was so shaken I had two close calls in the next week. Your nervous system is just shot. Please be easy on yourself about the second one.

      On the private settlement question: I tried it once for a minor bump. It was fine, but I was lucky. The thing is you just don't know if it'll stay simple. If your gut is already uneasy about this guy, that feeling is probably worth listening to.