The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancemellow-mole-091

Uninsured driver had a medical episode and destroyed my parked car — now what?

Still kind of in shock writing this. I was inside my house this afternoon when I heard a loud crash outside. Ran out to find my car — which was sitting in my own driveway, minding its own business — absolutely wrecked. A neighbor came over and told me the driver had some kind of medical episode behind the wheel and just plowed straight into it at full speed.

Cops came, took a report. Driver was taken away by ambulance. And here's the kicker: no insurance. None.

I have full coverage on my end, so I filed a claim pretty much immediately. But I still owe a significant amount on the loan — more than the car is probably worth at this point — and I'm genuinely terrified about what happens next.

A few things keeping me up tonight:

  • Will my own insurance actually pay out what I need to cover the loan balance, or just "actual cash value" which could leave me underwater?
  • I have gap coverage but honestly don't fully understand how it works in practice
  • Should I be talking to a lawyer even though I wasn't physically hurt?
  • Is there any realistic path to recovering anything from the driver directly, or is that basically a dead end if they have no assets?

I've never dealt with anything like this in my entire adult life. My car is my lifeline — I drive for work. Every day this drags out costs me money.

Any advice from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now. I feel like I'm just sitting here hoping my insurance company does the right thing, and something tells me it's not that simple.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 7
    humble-sparrow-629

    Oh man, I went through almost exactly this two years ago — parked car, uninsured driver, the whole thing. The part that blindsided me was that my insurance tried to settle at "actual cash value" which was several thousand less than what I owed. Gap coverage saved me but it took weeks of back-and-forth to actually get them to process it properly. Don't assume it's automatic — stay on top of them.

    • 8
      keen-bison-891

      Please do not just sit back and trust the adjuster to look out for you. Their job is to close the claim as cheaply as possible, full stop. They will find the lowest comparable vehicles they can to justify a lower payout. Document everything — photos, the police report, any quotes you get for replacement vehicles. And if they lowball you, push back hard with evidence.

    • 10
      plain-seal-809

      Even without physical injuries, it might be worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney, especially around the property damage and gap coverage side of things. Some attorneys handle total-loss disputes and can push back on lowball ACV offers in ways that are hard to do on your own. You're not obligated to hire anyone, but knowing your options doesn't hurt. Also — keep a log of every phone call with your insurer. Date, time, who you spoke to, what was said.

    • 15
      silent-seal-504

      I know you said you weren't in the car, but don't underestimate the stress response here. Even witnessing your property get destroyed like that can spike your cortisol and leave you feeling wired and exhausted at the same time. If you find yourself not sleeping or feeling really anxious over the next few days, that's completely normal. Take care of yourself while you're fighting the practical battles.

    • 20
      clever-raven-117

      Three things, in order: 1) Pull out your actual policy and read the uninsured motorist property damage section tonight. 2) Do NOT accept a settlement offer without understanding exactly how it compares to your loan payoff. 3) Call at least one attorney for a free consult before you sign anything. That's it. Don't overcomplicate it, but don't be passive either.

    • 10
      steady-optimist577

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

  • 10
    clever-raven-447

    Former adjuster here. A few insider things worth knowing: First, "actual cash value" calculations vary a lot and adjusters sometimes use comps that aren't really comparable to your car's condition or trim level. You're allowed to dispute those comps. Second, gap coverage typically only kicks in after the primary claim settles, so make sure you understand the timeline and file the gap claim separately if needed. Third — and I can't stress this enough — get the police report number and reference it in every single communication.

  • 19
    careful-seal-129

    Not legal advice, but a couple of things worth flagging: even if the at-fault driver has no insurance, depending on your state you may have uninsured motorist property damage coverage that applies here — worth double-checking your policy declarations page carefully. Also, whether you can pursue the driver personally depends a lot on their financial situation, which an attorney can help you assess. Many PI lawyers offer free consults even for property-damage-only situations.

    • 0
      steady-optimist123

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 19
    clever-beaver-794

    This is so unfair. You did everything right — had full coverage, parked in your own driveway — and some random thing happens and now YOU have to figure it all out? The system is so backwards sometimes. I really hope your insurance comes through without a fight. Rooting for you.

  • 9
    humble-owl-521

    Quick question — when you say "full coverage," do you actually know what coverages are on the policy? Because full coverage means different things to different people and insurers. Specifically, do you have uninsured motorist property damage, and what are the limits? That detail changes the situation quite a bit. Also, did the police report document that the driver had a medical episode, or is that just what people nearby told you? The official record matters.

    • 10
      steady-wanderer541

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 14
    steady-stoat-430

    The fact that you had full coverage and filed immediately puts you in a way better position than a lot of people who end up in this situation. And gap coverage existing on the policy is genuinely huge — plenty of people don't have it and get stuck owing thousands with no car. This is stressful and messy but you actually have real tools to work with here. Hang in there.