The Shoulder
The Shoulder
60
Insurancedaring-vole-624

Uninsured driver T-boned me and I only have liability — am I just screwed?

Still kind of shaking as I type this out, honestly.

Two days ago I was sitting at a red light on my way home from work when a pickup blew through a stop sign on the cross street and slammed into my driver's side. The impact pushed me halfway into the intersection. Airbags didn't deploy but my door is completely caved in — I had to climb out the passenger side to get out of the car.

Here's where it gets fun. The guy who hit me hands me a paper insurance card and I find out at the scene — through the cop who ran it — that his policy lapsed seven months ago. He's been driving around completely uninsured for the better part of a year.

I only carry liability on my car because it's older and I dropped the extra coverage to save money. I know, I know. Trust me, I know.

The police report is done, fault is clearly his, but I have no idea what that even means when there's no insurance to go after. My car is technically driveable but the door doesn't seal right and there's definitely frame damage. I'm also getting some neck stiffness that wasn't there before.

I called my insurance company and they basically just reminded me I don't have uninsured motorist coverage and said there's "not much they can do" on the vehicle side.

Do I need a lawyer? Can I even sue someone who clearly has no money if they can't afford insurance? What do I actually do here? I feel like I did everything right and I'm the one getting punished.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 21
    bright-dove-612

    I went through almost this exact situation about two years ago. Uninsured driver, my fault for not having UM coverage, total nightmare. What I learned the hard way is that you can sue the at-fault driver personally — it's called a personal injury lawsuit against them directly. Getting a judgment is one thing, collecting on it is another, but here's the thing: if they ever get a job, a tax refund, or any assets, that judgment follows them. It's not nothing. I ended up talking to a PI attorney who took my case on contingency and handled all of it. Didn't cost me anything upfront.

    • 7
      tired-commuter869

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

  • 17
    cool-seal-621

    Whatever you do, don't let your own insurance company convince you there's truly nothing they can do and just move on. Sometimes there are policy provisions people don't even know they have — like med-pay coverage for your injuries regardless of fault. Read your actual policy documents, not just what the adjuster tells you over the phone. Adjusters are not there to find you money, full stop.

    • 8
      clear-hare-755

      I'm so sorry this happened to you. You did everything right and you're still the one dealing with the fallout — that is genuinely infuriating and unfair. Please don't try to navigate all of this alone. Even just talking to an attorney for a free consult might take some of the weight off because at least you'd know what your options are instead of sitting with all this uncertainty. Rooting for you.

  • 9
    silent-otter-197

    Former adjuster here. Your instinct to be frustrated with "not much we can do" is valid — that's a real answer but it's also a conversation-ender that benefits them. A few things worth doing: 1) Get the full police report and confirm the at-fault citation is on there. 2) Check if your state has an uninsured motorist fund — some states have programs specifically for situations like yours. 3) If you have any health insurance, start using it for that neck stiffness right now. Don't wait. Document everything medically from day one.

  • 11
    keen-lynx-720

    Please go get checked out if you haven't already. Neck stiffness after an impact like that can be soft tissue stuff that seems minor and then gets significantly worse over the next 48-72 hours. I've seen people brush it off and regret it weeks later. Go to urgent care or your doctor, tell them exactly what happened, and let them do an exam. Not just for your health — for your records too, if this ends up going anywhere legally.

  • 23
    silent-wren-944

    A few things that might actually help here:

    • Uninsured Motorist (UM) coverage — you said you don't have it, but double-check your declarations page. Sometimes people have it and don't realize it.
    • Personal lawsuit — you can absolutely sue an uninsured at-fault driver. A judgment can be renewed and enforced against future assets or wages depending on your state's garnishment laws.
    • State-level resources — some states have unsatisfied judgment funds or victim compensation programs for exactly this kind of situation.

    Most PI attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency for cases like this, so there's no harm in at least making some calls. Not legal advice, just process stuff I've picked up.

    • 6
      weary-dreamer549

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 11
    steady-lynx-219

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the lack of insurance on their end doesn't mean you have no options, it just changes which options you use. A direct suit against the driver is viable and in some cases very worthwhile depending on their financial situation — which an attorney can help investigate. Also worth knowing: some states allow you to stack UM coverage from other vehicles on your household policy even if it's not on the car that was hit. Worth a free consult just to understand your actual position. Don't assume the worst until you've talked to someone.

    • 0
      steady-survivor435

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 7
    daring-stoat-053

    Blunt truth: you're probably not getting your car fixed through insurance. That ship has sailed. But your injury situation is separate and might have more legs than you think, especially if that neck issue develops into something real. Focus your energy on medical documentation right now and get a free consult with a PI lawyer this week — not next month, this week. The longer you wait the harder everything gets.