Hit-and-run UM claim — how careful do I need to be with my OWN insurance company?
So I was rear-ended at a red light about three weeks ago. Driver took off before I even got my seatbelt off. Got a police report the same night, and a neighbor's doorbell camera caught the fleeing car but not enough to ID the driver. My carrier opened a UM claim since there's no at-fault party to go after.
Here's where I'm getting nervous. I assumed dealing with my own insurance would be pretty straightforward — I pay them every month, right? But the adjuster's energy feels off. She's asking for a recorded statement "just to get your side on file" and sent over a medical authorization that would basically let them pull everything going back years. I only want them seeing records tied to this crash — I had some unrelated stuff a while back that has nothing to do with my neck pain now.
I've been going to a chiropractor twice a week and my doctor mentioned possible imaging if things don't improve. I also missed about a week of work, which I can document with pay stubs.
The first offer they floated was... not serious. It barely covered my urgent care visit and a small lump for "inconvenience." Nothing for the ongoing treatment I'm still in the middle of, nothing real for lost wages.
A few things I'm trying to figure out:
- Recorded statement — is it smarter to do it, keep it short and factual, or ask to respond in writing instead?
- Medical auth — can I push back and limit it to the past year and only the providers treating this injury? Will they fight me on that?
- The offer — what actually gets them to move? Do I need to finish treatment first before negotiating, or can I counter now with what I have?
I'm not trying to be difficult, I just don't want to accidentally hand them something they use against me later. Anyone been through this?