The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsplain-marmot-606

We caused the accident and the other driver wants to handle it privately — am I right to be nervous?

So this happened a few days ago and I can't stop stressing about it. My partner was driving and clipped another car making a left turn through an intersection. It was definitely our fault — the other driver had the right of way. The damage to their car looked pretty minor to me, like a scuffed bumper, but I honestly have no idea what that stuff costs to fix.

Here's the thing: we only have the bare minimum insurance coverage. Our own car has some cosmetic damage but nothing that would be covered anyway. The other driver was really calm about the whole thing, exchanged info, and then texted my partner later saying he'd rather just keep it between them and get a couple estimates from his own mechanic instead of going through insurance.

My partner thinks this is great — no claim means no rate increase, no hassle. His coworkers are all saying the same thing. But I've been reading stuff online and I'm genuinely worried. Like what if this guy gets an estimate and the frame is messed up and suddenly it's way more than we expected? Or what if he decides two months from now to go back through insurance and we never reported it?

I brought up the idea of calling our insurer just to give them a heads up and everyone acted like I was completely overreacting since we didn't even get a ticket at the scene.

Am I being paranoid? Has anyone dealt with settling something like this privately and had it go fine — or go sideways? I just feel like keeping our insurance in the dark could really backfire and I'd rather be safe than sorry.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 10
    cool-beaver-140

    We were on the other side of almost this exact situation — someone hit our car in a parking lot and asked us to keep it off insurance. We agreed, got a verbal estimate, and then found out the repair shop discovered hidden damage underneath. What started as a small conversation turned into a real mess because nothing was in writing. My biggest advice: if you do go the private route, get EVERYTHING documented and signed before any money changes hands. Like a written agreement spelling out exactly what's being paid and that it's full and final settlement.

    • 12
      warm-hare-648

      Your gut is right. The other driver being super chill right now doesn't mean anything — people change their tune the second they take the car in and a mechanic starts poking around underneath. I've seen people settle informally and then get hit with a demand letter six months later. Insurance companies have time limits for filing claims and they vary by state, so the other driver could potentially still bring your insurer into it way later than you'd expect.

  • 11
    steady-marten-455

    Worked in claims for years. A few things you should know: first, most auto policies have a clause requiring you to report accidents promptly — not just when a claim is filed against you, but when an incident happens. Failing to report can technically give your insurer grounds to deny coverage later if things go south. Second, 'minor' bumper damage is almost never just the bumper anymore. Modern cars have sensors, cameras, and structural pieces back there that add up fast. I've seen 'scuffed bumpers' turn into four-figure repairs once a shop gets involved. I'm not saying don't handle it privately, I'm saying go in with your eyes open.

  • 21
    bold-bison-601

    Not legal advice, but if you do settle this privately, you absolutely want a written release of liability signed by the other driver before you hand over any money. It should state the amount paid, that it covers all claims related to this specific incident, and ideally get it notarized. Without that document, paying someone informally doesn't stop them from coming back and saying they never agreed to close the matter. Also worth knowing: in most states, the other driver has longer than you'd think to file a personal injury claim even if they seem totally fine right now.

  • 16
    brave-wolf-244

    Just want to add the injury piece since everyone's focused on the car damage. People feel fine immediately after an accident all the time and then wake up two or three days later with neck or back pain they didn't expect. Adrenaline is real. I'm not saying this guy is faking anything — I'm saying he might genuinely feel okay right now and not be okay in a week. That's another reason why a written agreement that covers both property and any potential injury claims matters so much.

    • 0
      hopeful-passenger839

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

  • 14
    swift-fox-189

    Call your insurance company. Tell them what happened. You don't have to file a claim — you're just reporting an incident. That's it. It protects you if this guy circles back later, and your insurer literally cannot use a simple notification to raise your rates (they raise rates when claims are paid, not when you call to ask a question). Stop letting your partner's coworkers make your insurance decisions.

  • 10
    tidy-lynx-846

    You are not being dramatic AT ALL. I'd be losing sleep over this too. The fact that he has your partner's number but your partner doesn't have his is what would really freak me out — you have no way to reach him to check in or nail down any agreement. Trust your instincts here.

    • 2
      hopeful-commuter309

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

  • 8
    plain-crow-595

    Did you actually get a police report number? Because if a report was filed, there's an official record of the accident regardless of what you two decide to do privately. Worth knowing exactly what's in that report before you decide anything.