The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
quiet-elk-976

Woke up to major side panel damage — hit-and-run or did I do this myself??

Okay so I'm genuinely losing my mind trying to figure out what happened to my car and I need a reality check from people who might have been through something similar.

I came out yesterday morning to go to work and my driver's side rear panel was absolutely caved in — like a deep crease running the whole length of the door, paint scraped off, and the trim piece was hanging by a thread. I had parked on the street the night before in a pretty busy area near my apartment.

Here's the thing — I did not hear anything overnight. No bang, no alarm, nothing. But I also sleep pretty hard so I guess that's not conclusive. The damage looks significant though. Like, enough that whoever hit me would have felt it. And the angle of the crease looks horizontal, not like I scraped a curb or a pole.

I've been going over it in my head all morning and I genuinely cannot figure out if: 1. Someone sideswiped me in the night and just drove off 2. I somehow clipped something when I parked and I'm blocking it out 3. My neighbor across the street (who parks a big truck) is responsible but isn't saying anything

I checked around the damage and there's a smear of a different color paint worked into the scrape — so that has to mean another car hit me, right? Would my own tire or a curb leave paint transfer like that?

I took photos of everything but I'm not sure what to do next. Do I file a police report even though I have no witness? Does my insurance even cover this without knowing who did it? I feel like I'm going in circles. Anyone dealt with this kind of mystery damage before?

9replies

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9 replies

  • 18
    humble-vole-294

    The paint transfer is your answer. I had almost the exact same situation — woke up to mystery damage and was questioning my own memory. The body shop pointed out the foreign paint embedded in my crease and said there's zero chance that came from a stationary object like a curb or pole. Someone hit you and drove off. I'm sorry, it's such a violating feeling even though nobody was hurt.

    • 19
      warm-tern-000

      As someone who used to work claims, I'll tell you the paint transfer detail is actually pretty useful. When you call your insurer, mention it right away and ask if they can have an appraiser examine it before any repairs. Sometimes the color and type of paint can help narrow down what kind of vehicle hit you — especially if the smear is higher up (truck or SUV) versus lower (another sedan). Also check if there are any businesses or apartment building cameras on that street. A lot of hit-and-run cases get resolved from random ATM or storefront footage.

  • 10
    careful-newt-959

    File a police report TODAY even if you have no witness. I know it feels pointless but you need that report number for your insurance claim. Some departments will even send someone out to look at paint transfer evidence. Don't wait on this — the longer you wait the more it looks like you're not sure what happened.

    • 19
      patient-dove-186

      The police report is important for more than just insurance — if that neighbor or anyone else later comes forward, or if you find surveillance footage, having a timestamped report on record establishes that you reported it immediately. That matters a lot if there's ever a dispute about who's responsible. Also document everything with photos before you touch the car at all, which it sounds like you already did, so good on that front.

  • 16
    daring-seal-022

    Just a heads up — if you file under your own collision coverage because the other driver is unknown, your insurer might try to nudge you toward paying your deductible and moving on quietly. Push back. Ask specifically about uninsured motorist property damage coverage because in some states that applies to hit-and-runs and has a lower or no deductible. Don't just accept the first thing they tell you.

  • 10
    bold-badger-291

    Ugh I'm so sorry, this is such a stressful thing to deal with first thing in the morning. You're not going crazy — paint transfer from another car doesn't just appear. I really hope the neighbor situation doesn't turn into a whole thing. Are you okay?

    • 4
      grounded-mile-marker787

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

  • 13
    tidy-heron-053

    What color is the paint smear and what color is your car? If they're similar shades I'd want to know more before writing off the possibility that it came from a painted concrete pillar or bollard — some of those are painted and leave marks that look like paint transfer. Not saying that's what happened, just that it's worth ruling out before you go accusing a neighbor.

    • 7
      silent-kestrel-110

      Not legal advice, but from a practical standpoint — preserve everything as-is until at least an insurance appraiser has seen it. Don't let a well-meaning body shop buddy buff anything out or pull the panel before it's been properly documented. If there's any chance of recovering costs from an identifiable third party down the line, that physical evidence matters more than people realize.