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daring-wolf-214

Other driver's insurance decided I'm at fault and now wants money — never even spoke to me first??

I'm honestly still in shock and don't even know where to start with this.

A couple months back I was leaving a shopping center and pulling onto a four-lane road. I merged into the right lane — my lane, completely legally — and out of nowhere a car from the center lane drifts over and clips my front quarter panel with their rear bumper. We both pulled over into a nearby lot, exchanged a look at the damage, and honestly it seemed so minor that we both just kind of shrugged. No injuries, nobody called the police, and we went our separate ways without swapping info (I know, I know).

Fast forward about six weeks and I get a letter from an insurance company I've never heard of. Apparently it's the other driver's insurer. I try calling the number on the letter — voicemail, no callback. Then a second letter shows up maybe three weeks after that saying they've "completed their investigation" and determined the accident was my fault, and now they want me to pay for the other driver's repairs.

I'm sorry — what investigation?? They never once talked to me. No recorded statement, no questions, nothing. I didn't even know an investigation was happening.

When I finally got someone on the phone I tried explaining that the other driver was the one who crossed into my lane, but the adjuster just kept talking over me and referencing their "file notes" like the case was already closed.

My own insurance knows about it now but I'm worried about what happens if the other company keeps pushing. Has anyone dealt with this? Do I just let my insurer handle it, or do I need to do something myself?

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9 replies

  • 16
    calm-beaver-122

    A few things worth knowing: (1) the other insurer cannot garnish your wages or put a lien on anything just by sending a demand letter — they'd have to actually sue you first, which is a whole separate process. (2) Your insurer has what's called subrogation rights, meaning they can fight this dispute on your behalf. (3) If you genuinely were in your lane and the other driver crossed over, that's a factual dispute that their one-sided 'file notes' don't automatically win. Document everything you remember about the accident right now, in writing, with as much detail as possible — lane positions, road markings, direction of travel, all of it.

    • 6
      tidy-newt-955

      Three things: 1) Call your own insurance today if you haven't already. 2) Stop talking to the other driver's insurer directly — every word is being noted. 3) Write down everything you remember about the accident while it's still fresh. That's it. Don't overthink it.

  • 15
    steady-mole-415

    This is almost exactly what happened to me two years ago. The other driver's insurance made a fault decision before anyone ever called me — I didn't even know the claim existed until a demand letter showed up. The short answer: let YOUR insurance take the wheel immediately if you haven't already. That's literally what you pay premiums for. Once I looped my insurer in, the back-and-forth stopped coming directly to me and it got a lot less stressful.

    • 14
      plain-badger-393

      What they did is called a 'unilateral liability determination' and insurers pull this constantly. They take their insured's version of events, rubber-stamp it, and send you a scary letter hoping you'll just pay up or panic-admit fault over the phone. Do NOT give them a recorded statement without understanding what you're agreeing to. And definitely don't pay anything or say anything that sounds like an apology or acceptance of responsibility.

    • 14
      bold-heron-598

      I used to work on the claims side and I'll be honest — that second letter is a pressure tactic as much as anything else. When only one party has been interviewed, any 'investigation' is basically one-sided by definition. Your own insurance company can formally dispute the fault finding. They have people whose entire job is exactly this kind of inter-company back-and-forth. You're not helpless here.

  • 13
    quiet-vole-268

    I'm glad it sounds like no one was physically hurt in the crash itself. I'll just gently add — if you've been anxious or losing sleep over this since the letters arrived, that stress response is real and valid. Don't let the financial pressure make you rush into saying or signing anything you're not sure about. Take a breath, get your insurer involved, and handle it one step at a time.

  • 6
    bright-crane-569

    Not legal advice, but this scenario — where the adverse insurer makes a fault determination without ever contacting you — is actually pretty common and pretty contestable. The key thing your own insurance needs to hear from you is your clear, consistent account of what happened. If the other side ever escalates to a lawsuit, that's when you'd want an attorney involved directly. For now, document your version of events thoroughly and keep records of every letter and phone call with dates.

  • 4
    warm-hare-624

    Few questions before I weigh in: Did you report this to your own insurance right after it happened, or only after the letters came? And when you say you merged into the right lane — had you fully completed the merge before the contact happened, or were you still mid-lane-change? I'm not doubting you, but those details matter a lot for how a dispute plays out.

  • 2
    quick-bison-523

    Ugh this sounds so stressful and unfair. Getting a demand letter out of nowhere when you didn't even think the accident was a big deal — that's a gut punch. Please don't try to handle this alone though. Even just calling your insurance and reading them the letters out loud is a huge first step. You've got this.