The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsspry-badger-494

Unlicensed driver in a rental box truck T-boned us — does the rental company have any liability?

Still kind of in shock writing this out but I need some answers from people who've actually been through something similar.

About two weeks ago my partner and I were driving home from a grocery run when a large rental box truck blew a red light and slammed into the passenger side of our car. Our car is a total loss — we owned it outright, no payments, just gone. My partner has a fractured wrist and I've been dealing with a pretty bad neck strain and some bruised ribs.

Here's where it gets complicated: the driver of the rental truck apparently did not have a valid license. Like, it was suspended or expired — I'm still piecing this together from the police report. And from what we can tell, he had no personal auto insurance either.

I have so many questions I don't even know where to start:

  • Can someone actually rent a large commercial-style box truck without a valid license? Doesn't the rental company check?
  • If the rental company failed to verify his license, does that make them partly responsible?
  • We only have basic liability on our own policy — no uninsured motorist coverage (I know, I know). What options do we even have?
  • We have no vehicle now and can't really afford a rental out of pocket indefinitely. Who covers that while this gets sorted out?

We're not wealthy people. This one incident has genuinely upended our finances and my partner can't work right now because of the wrist. I'm trying to stay calm but honestly I'm terrified we're going to be left holding the bag here.

If anyone has dealt with an uninsured or unlicensed driver situation — especially involving a rental vehicle — please share what happened. I feel completely lost.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 17
    curious-hare-496

    Not legal advice, but this is worth knowing: rental companies generally have a legal duty to verify that anyone they hand keys to is properly licensed. If they skipped that step or were careless about it, there's a real argument for negligent entrustment — meaning the company itself could share liability for the damage and injuries. That's a very different situation than a random uninsured stranger hitting you with their own car. Definitely worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney who handles commercial vehicle cases.

  • 14
    candid-raven-120

    Oh man, I went through something similar — not a box truck but an uninsured driver who rear-ended me pretty badly. The thing nobody tells you upfront is that the rental company's own insurance policy can actually become a big piece of the puzzle. When I dug into it, the rental company had commercial liability coverage on the vehicle itself. Whether that covers you depends on a lot of factors but it's absolutely worth pursuing. Don't assume you're out of options just because the driver himself has nothing.

    • 4
      steady-survivor694

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

  • 12
    cool-elk-849

    One thing I'd want to know more about: how did you find out the license was suspended or expired — did the officer tell you at the scene or is this from the police report? And did the rental company acknowledge anything at the scene or after? Those details could matter a lot for figuring out whether they had actual knowledge of the problem or just failed to check. The story could look very different depending on what the rental contract says.

  • 11
    bold-dove-156

    Whatever you do, be really careful if the rental company's insurance adjuster calls you wanting a recorded statement. They are not your friend. Their job is to minimize what they pay out. You can be polite but you do NOT have to give a recorded statement, and honestly you probably shouldn't until you've at least talked to an attorney. I learned this the hard way.

  • 11
    genuine-tern-737

    Please make sure both you and your partner are following up with actual doctors and not just assuming things will heal on their own. Neck injuries especially can seem manageable at first and then flare up weeks later. A fractured wrist needs proper imaging and follow-up to make sure it's healing correctly. Document every appointment, every prescription, every time you have to miss work or normal activities because of this. That paper trail matters a lot down the road.

  • 11
    keen-wolf-874

    I'm so sorry you're going through this. A fractured wrist, bruised ribs, no car, and no clear answers — that's an enormous amount to carry at once. Please don't try to navigate all of this alone. Even just talking to a personal injury attorney for a free consultation (most do free consultations) can help you understand what your actual options are before you start feeling like you have to settle for nothing.

    • 0
      careful-passenger140

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

    • 7
      grounded-road-soul314

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

  • 11
    genuine-crow-076

    Here's the blunt version: the driver having no insurance doesn't mean you're automatically out of luck, it just means the money has to come from somewhere else — and the rental company is the most obvious somewhere else. Focus your energy there. Also, stop using your own money for a rental if at all possible. Keep receipts for everything you spend. If the rental company is found liable, out-of-pocket expenses like that are part of your damages claim.

  • 7
    gentle-newt-093

    I used to work on the claims side and I can tell you rental companies are not always as careful about license verification as you'd hope — especially at busy locations. What I'd do right now: send a written request (email is fine, keep the receipt) to the rental company asking them to preserve all records related to the rental transaction — the contract, any ID that was scanned, everything. Companies have been known to let records disappear when litigation pressure isn't on them yet. Do it soon.

  • 7
    clever-wren-056

    A couple of practical things: first, get a certified copy of the full police report as soon as it's available — not just the exchange slip but the full narrative report. It may detail whether the officer noted the license issue and how the rental company's info was recorded. Second, look into whether your state has an uninsured motorist fund or a victim compensation program. Some states have them specifically for situations like this. It's not a guarantee but it's worth a phone call to your state's insurance commissioner office.

    • 10
      steady-commuter137

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