The Shoulder
The Shoulder
68
swift-marten-051

My unregistered car got hit while parked — am I screwed because of my license situation?

So today was just a terrible day and I'm spiraling a little, hoping someone here has been through something similar.

I was at work when my neighbor called me — said my old pickup that's been sitting on the street got clipped pretty bad by a driver who lost control and jumped the curb. I rushed over and the other driver was still there with a cop on scene. Officer confirmed the other driver was at fault, no question. I got the other driver's insurance card, snapped photos of both vehicles and the damage, and the officer gave me a report number even though nobody was hurt.

Here's where it gets complicated for me personally. That parked truck? It's not currently registered — tags lapsed a few months ago — and I don't carry insurance on it because it hasn't been driven. It just sits there. My daily driver is a different vehicle and that one is fully insured.

On top of that, I've got an SR-22 requirement tied to my license right now from a past situation. I'm terrified that the DMV is somehow going to find out about the unregistered truck being involved in this and come after my license or my SR-22 status, even though I wasn't even driving it — it was parked.

Can the at-fault driver's liability insurance still pay to fix my truck even if it's unregistered? Does the DMV even get notified when a parked car gets hit and nobody's injured? Is my SR-22 at any risk here?

I know I should probably talk to someone who actually knows this stuff, but it's the weekend and I'm anxious. Any experience or insight appreciated.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 16
    cool-swift-089

    I had almost this exact thing happen — parked car, not registered, someone rear-ended it in front of my house. The other driver's insurance still paid out for my car because their driver was at fault. Your registration status doesn't protect them from their own liability. I was so stressed for nothing honestly. The key thing is you have their insurance info, which it sounds like you do.

  • 13
    curious-fox-019

    From what I understand working in this space, the at-fault driver's property damage liability coverage should cover your vehicle regardless of whether it was registered. Their insurance owes for the damage their insured caused — your registration lapse doesn't factor into that equation. The DMV notification piece is the part worth looking into. In most states, police file reports when injuries are involved or when damage exceeds a certain dollar threshold, but a parked-car-no-injury incident may not trigger that automatically. That said, I'd call your state DMV's general line Monday just to ask directly — don't volunteer extra info, just ask what gets reported in a parked car, no-injury scenario.

    • 6
      thankful-offramp674

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

    • 3
      calm-passenger986

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 20
    brave-wren-823

    Worked claims for years. The other driver's insurer doesn't care about your registration — that's between you and the DMV, not their problem. What they care about is: was their driver at fault, and what's the damage worth. You have a case number and photos, so you're in decent shape. File the claim with their insurance directly, not yours. Don't let anyone steer you toward filing with your own carrier since you said the truck isn't insured anyway, and you don't need to.

    • 8
      bright-sparrow-222

      Not legal advice, but the SR-22 concern is the piece I'd actually want answered by a professional before Monday if possible. SR-22s are attached to your driving record and liability as an operator — a parked vehicle you weren't in typically shouldn't trigger a violation. But every state DMV handles this differently and your specific prior situation matters. A quick consult with a PI or traffic attorney could put your mind at ease fast. Many do free calls.

  • 7
    brave-fox-311

    Just watch out — the other driver's adjuster may try to lowball you or drag their feet because they sense you're anxious and unfamiliar with the process. Don't accept the first offer without getting at least one independent repair estimate. And honestly, if the damage is significant, having someone look over the claim before you sign anything isn't a bad idea.

  • 9
    clever-finch-554

    I know you said no injuries but please just pay attention to yourself the next day or two. Adrenaline is wild — I've seen people walk away from stressful scenes totally fine and then wake up with tension headaches or neck tightness they didn't notice right away. If anything shows up physically, document it and see a doctor. Probably nothing, just worth saying.

  • 16
    kind-marten-683

    Ugh, I'm sorry this happened to you. The fact that you weren't even IN the car and you're this stressed about it just shows how unfair the whole system feels. Hope you get some clarity Monday. Sounds like you did everything right at the scene.

  • 8
    genuine-fox-512

    Three things for Monday: (1) call the at-fault driver's insurance and open a property damage claim — give them the case number; (2) call your DMV and ask specifically whether a no-injury parked car incident gets reported to them; (3) if your SR-22 insurer has a customer line, a quick call to ask if this affects anything is worth five minutes of your time. Don't overthink it until you have actual answers.

    • 5
      restless-sidewalk651

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 15
    careful-swan-484

    How bad is the damage on the truck? That might matter more than anything else here. If it's a fender bender, this probably resolves quietly. If the truck is totaled, a title and registration issue could complicate the payout process since the insurer will want clear title documentation. Just something to think about.