Matlock owlMatlock
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brave-marten-491

Hit and run left me with a smashed car and zero answers — what now?

So this happened about two weeks ago and I'm still kind of in shock honestly. I was parked at a red light when someone rear-ended me hard enough to push my car into the intersection. By the time I got my bearings and stepped out, the other driver had already bolted — just left their car running in the middle of the road and took off on foot through a nearby parking lot.

Police showed up, ran the plates, and told me the car had been reported stolen earlier that day. So now I'm sitting here with a car that might be totaled (the whole rear end is crushed, trunk won't close, bumper is basically hanging off), a sore neck that's getting worse not better, and absolutely no one to hold accountable.

My own insurance has uninsured motorist coverage, which I guess is the only silver lining here. But I've never had to actually USE my insurance for something like this and I genuinely don't know how aggressive they're going to be about paying out. Like, are they going to fight me on this even though I clearly did nothing wrong?

Also — does a stolen vehicle situation change anything legally? Does it matter that the actual owner of the car didn't cause the accident?

I filed the police report, took photos at the scene, went to urgent care the next day. What else should I be doing right now? I feel completely lost and honestly a little taken advantage of even though nobody specific wronged ME specifically, if that makes sense.

8replies

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8 replies

  • 16
    candid-wren-520

    The stolen vehicle piece generally doesn't hurt your UM claim — uninsured motorist coverage typically applies when the at-fault driver can't be identified or doesn't have insurance, and a stolen car situation usually falls under that umbrella. That said, every policy is worded differently. Pull out your declarations page and look at exactly how your UM coverage is defined. If you can't make sense of it, that's a good reason to at least consult with a PI attorney — many do free case reviews.

  • 15
    curious-heron-202

    That worsening neck pain after a rear-end collision is really important not to brush off. Soft tissue injuries from whiplash often don't peak until 48-72 hours after impact or sometimes even later. Please follow up with a doctor beyond urgent care — get imaging if they recommend it, and don't skip any follow-up appointments. Your medical records become your paper trail.

  • 14
    patient-swift-281

    Please be really careful here. Even though this feels open-and-shut — you were rear-ended, you did nothing wrong, stolen car — your UM adjuster is still going to look for ANY reason to reduce your payout. They might question the extent of your injuries, dispute the repair estimate, or drag their feet hoping you get frustrated and settle fast. Don't give them a recorded statement without understanding your rights first.

    • 11
      gentle-tern-243

      Here's what I'd do in your shoes right now: don't give your insurance a recorded statement yet, get a second repair estimate beyond whatever shop they suggest, keep a daily journal of how your neck feels, and call at least two personal injury attorneys for free consults this week. You're not being dramatic — this is a legitimate situation and you need to protect yourself.

  • 13
    bright-raven-255

    I'm so sorry this happened to you. The fact that you did everything right and still ended up in this mess is genuinely unfair. Please don't try to tough out the neck pain — I had a friend who ignored similar symptoms and it turned into something way more serious. Take care of yourself first, the paperwork can follow.

  • 7
    sharp-mole-346

    I went through almost the exact same thing last year — someone ran a stop sign, clipped me, and disappeared into a neighborhood. Stolen car situation too. The thing nobody tells you is that your OWN insurance company can sometimes act more like an adversary than an ally when it's an uninsured motorist claim. They still have a financial interest in paying you as little as possible. Stay on top of everything and document every single conversation.

  • 6
    keen-seal-071

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the combination of a hit-and-run, a stolen vehicle, and a physical injury that's progressing is exactly the kind of case where having someone in your corner matters. Your insurer owes you good faith under your own policy, but that doesn't mean they'll automatically do right by you. At minimum get a free consultation somewhere before you sign anything or give any recorded statements. The neck issue alone is reason enough to take this seriously.

  • 3
    bright-owl-599

    Former adjuster here. Stolen vehicle cases are actually pretty common and your UM coverage is exactly what it's designed for — so that part is legitimate. What I'd watch out for: the adjuster assigned to your claim has a caseload and metrics to hit, and a quick low settlement helps their numbers. The neck injury is where they'll push back hardest. Get medical documentation for EVERY symptom, no matter how minor it seems right now. Gaps in treatment are used against you.