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sharp-lynx-876

Rear-ended by a semi at a stoplight — driver gave me bogus insurance info. What now?

I'm still kind of in shock and honestly just need to hear from people who've been through something like this.

About a week ago I was completely stopped at a red light when a large commercial semi plowed into the back of my car. No warning, no skid marks — just a full-on hit from behind. My hatchback's rear end is crumpled pretty bad. The liftgate won't open at all and there's a weird grinding noise when I drive over 40 mph that wasn't there before.

I got the police out there, filed a report, got the driver's info and what he said was his carrier's insurance. Here's where it gets infuriating: I called the number on the insurance card and they told me that truck hasn't had active coverage with them for over a year. I called a second number listed on some paperwork the driver handed me and that company said the same thing — no active policy.

Now the driver won't pick up my calls. Goes straight to voicemail every time.

I only carry liability on my own policy — I dropped the collision coverage a while back to save money (I know, I know). So I can't just go through my own insurance for repairs.

I've kept everything — the police report number, photos of both vehicles, screenshots of my unanswered calls, and all the paperwork the driver gave me.

Has anyone successfully tracked down the actual insurance on a commercial truck when the driver gave you bad info? Is there a way to figure out who really covers that rig? I feel completely stuck and I don't want to just eat this cost.

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9 replies

  • 14
    humble-badger-925

    Please don't forget about yourself in all this. Rear-end collisions — even ones that 'just' feel like a hard jolt — can cause soft tissue injuries that don't show up until 48-72 hours later or even longer. If you've got any stiffness in your neck or upper back, headaches, or anything feeling off, get checked out now rather than waiting. Documenting injuries early matters both for your health and for any claim you might need to make later.

  • 13
    swift-vole-174

    Stop calling, start writing. Calls are easy to ignore and leave no record. Send a written demand via certified mail to every address you have for the driver and whatever company name was on the truck's door. Also file a complaint with your state's DMV or motor vehicle enforcement division — a commercial driver operating with lapsed insurance is a licensing violation, not just a civil matter. That sometimes lights a fire under people.

  • 12
    swift-swan-907

    Oh man, I went through almost exactly this two years ago with a delivery truck. The key thing that helped me was looking up the truck's DOT number — commercial trucks are required to have one displayed on the cab. With that number you can search the FMCSA website (it's a federal database) and find the carrier's registered insurance on file. The card the driver hands you can be outdated, but the federal filing has to be current for them to legally operate. Took me like 20 minutes and I found the real carrier that way.

    • 5
      hearty-crane-731

      Whatever you do, don't let YOUR insurance company talk you into opening a claim on your own policy if there's any way to avoid it. Even if they frame it as 'we'll subrogate and get reimbursed,' it can still affect your rates and you'd be on the hook for a deductible. Push hard on finding the commercial carrier first.

    • 14
      kind-dove-453

      This sounds so stressful, I'm really sorry you're dealing with it. The part about the driver going silent is especially awful — you did everything right and now you're the one scrambling. I hope you find some answers soon. Hang in there.

  • 12
    sharp-kestrel-821

    A few practical steps: First, send a certified letter (return receipt) to the driver's last known address preserving your claim — creates a paper trail showing you tried. Second, that FMCSA database search is free at safer.fmcsa.dot.gov. You just need the DOT or MC number off the truck. Third, if the truck was operating under a freight broker or for a company, that company may have vicarious liability even if they claim the driver was an independent contractor. Courts have been pretty skeptical of that dodge lately.

    • 9
      kind-stoat-601

      Not legal advice, but I'll say this: commercial trucking cases are genuinely different from regular car accidents in terms of complexity. There are federal regulations, multiple potentially liable parties, and carriers who are very experienced at deflecting claims. The evidence window also closes fast — trucking companies aren't always great about preserving dashcam footage or electronic logging device data voluntarily. Most PI attorneys who handle truck cases work on contingency so there's no upfront cost to at least get a consultation and understand your options.

    • 12
      clear-heron-025

      Did you get the actual DOT number and MC number off the truck at the scene, or just what the driver wrote down for you? There's a big difference — if you only have what he handed you, that info could be anything. Also, was there a company name or logo on the cab/trailer? Even a partial name can help narrow down the carrier through the FMCSA search.

  • 4
    bright-vole-057

    Former adjuster here. Commercial trucks — especially owner-operators leased to a larger carrier — are notorious for this kind of insurance confusion. There are sometimes THREE layers: the driver's personal policy, the leasing carrier's policy, and the broker's contingent coverage. The card the driver gives you is often just one layer, and not always the right one.

    The FMCSA tip above is solid. Also pull the police report carefully — the responding officer sometimes runs the truck's registration separately and gets carrier info that doesn't match what the driver hands over. That discrepancy is documented and useful.