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I rear-ended someone and my assets are way over my policy limits — how scared should I be?

This is going to sound paranoid but I need someone to talk me down (or not).

About six weeks ago I tapped the back of someone's SUV at a light. We're talking maybe 10–15 mph, their bumper had a crack, my hood had a small crumple. I stayed, we exchanged info, called police, the whole thing. They said they felt fine at the scene.

Fast forward to last week — I got a letter from an attorney saying they're representing the other driver for "injuries sustained in the collision." Already lawyered up within six weeks of what felt like a fender-bender to me.

Here's what's eating me alive: I own a small business, have some rental property, and have savings that are honestly well above what my liability coverage would pay out. I've been reading everything I can and most sources say insurers settle the vast majority of claims within policy limits — but I keep fixating on the exceptions. What actually happens in those cases? If their attorney figures out I have real assets, does that change how hard they push? Could I actually be on the hook personally?

My insurer has a lawyer handling it and told me not to worry, but that feels like something they'd say regardless. I haven't talked to my own independent attorney yet — probably should, right?

Has anyone been in a situation like this? How did it play out? I'm not sleeping well and would really appreciate hearing from people who've been through something similar.

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