The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsgenuine-stoat-949

Wife rear-ended someone at low speed, now both people in that car lawyered up — feeling uneasy

So this happened a few weeks ago and I'm still kind of processing it. My wife was driving home from work, got stuck in stop-and-go traffic on the highway, and tapped the car ahead of her when they braked suddenly. We're talking maybe 10–15 mph, if that. The damage to their bumper was cosmetic at best — honestly looked like a scuff. My wife immediately got out, asked if everyone was okay, and both the driver and the front-seat passenger said they felt totally fine. She even stayed calm, exchanged info, the whole thing.

Fast forward about two weeks and we get word through our insurance that both people in the other car have retained attorneys and are pursuing bodily injury claims. I don't know what to think. Neither of them seemed hurt at the scene. I'm not saying whiplash isn't real — I know it can show up later — but it just feels off given how low-speed this was.

Here's where I'm also confused: our bodily injury liability coverage has a per-accident cap, so there's only so much to go around between the two of them. Our insurer is telling us to let the other side's attorneys know our coverage limits. My gut says that feels like handing them a roadmap, but our adjuster says we're required to disclose and that refusing could actually make things worse for us legally.

Has anyone been through something like this from the at-fault side? My wife already feels terrible even though it was a genuine accident. Just trying to understand what to expect and whether we should do anything proactively beyond letting our insurance handle it.

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11 replies

  • 19
    humble-wren-138

    Not legal advice, but from a practical standpoint: your insurer has a duty to defend your wife under the policy, which means they'll assign her a defense attorney if this escalates to litigation — you typically don't need to hire one yourself. Where people get into trouble is when damages might exceed the policy cap, because then your personal assets could theoretically be exposed. Worth asking your insurer directly: 'Is there any scenario where I'd be personally liable beyond my coverage?' Their answer should guide whether you want independent counsel. Again, not legal advice.

    • 15
      silent-crow-877

      I'll be the one to say it — whiplash from low-speed impacts is genuinely real and can be delayed by days. I've seen it in patients. That said, the presence of attorneys doesn't automatically mean the injuries are serious; people lawyer up quickly in accidents now because they've heard that's what you do. Your wife should also make sure her own health is checked if she felt any tension in her neck or back after — stress and adrenaline can mask your own symptoms too.

  • 17
    silent-owl-246

    Ugh, I'm so sorry you're both dealing with this. Your wife sounds like she handled the scene really responsibly, and it sucks that doing everything right still leads to this kind of stress. Hope your insurer takes the weight off your shoulders soon.

  • 16
    curious-beaver-004

    Quick question — did your wife get a copy of the police report, and did the officers note anything about injuries at the scene? That report can be really useful if the claimed injuries feel inconsistent with what was documented right after the crash.

  • 15
    mellow-lynx-324

    Stop second-guessing and let your insurance company do their job. You pay premiums for exactly this scenario. Your one job right now is to not say anything to the other side or their attorneys without your insurer's knowledge, and to hand over every piece of documentation you have. That's it.

    • 8
      plainspoken-sidewalk265

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 11
    kind-newt-978

    The moment the other side's attorneys ask about your limits, they're doing the math on what's worth pursuing. Your insurer telling you to disclose isn't necessarily wrong, but just know that number can become their target. Not saying don't disclose — if your insurer says you have to, that's probably true — just understand what's happening strategically.

    • 1
      soft-spoken-backseat430

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 9
    tidy-hare-481

    We were on the at-fault side of something similar a couple years ago — low speed, minor damage, and the other driver seemed totally fine at the scene. A few weeks later, yep, attorney letters. It's jarring. Honestly the best thing we did was just step back and let our insurer run point. That's literally what you're paying them for. Stressful as heck to watch unfold, but it did eventually resolve without us having to pay anything out of pocket beyond our premium.

    • 13
      genuine-hare-465

      Former adjuster here. Disclosure of limits is pretty standard and in most states it's legally required once there's a represented claimant. Your insurer isn't trying to hurt you — they're protecting themselves AND you from a bad faith claim down the road. The bigger thing people miss on the at-fault side: make sure you have an assigned defense contact at your insurer and get their direct line. Don't just wait on generic updates. Stay in the loop without overstepping.

    • 20
      clever-wren-312

      The limit disclosure thing is almost always mandatory once attorneys are involved — your carrier's right on that one. What I'd also suggest: if your wife filmed or photographed anything at the scene (damage, the other car, even the road conditions), make sure that's preserved and handed over to your insurer now. Documentation of the scene and vehicle damage can matter a lot when soft-tissue claims come in on what looks like a minor impact.