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The Shoulder
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hearty-kestrel-236

Two cars merging into the same lane at the same time — who's actually at fault here?

Still trying to wrap my head around what happened so bear with me.

I was driving a full-size pickup on the highway a few weeks ago. Traffic was bunching up and I needed to move left, so I checked my mirrors, signaled, and started easing over. At basically the exact same moment, a sedan in that left lane was also signaling and moving right — into the same gap I was heading for.

We sideswiped each other right in the middle of the lane change. My passenger side took a hit along the door panel and rear quarter. The sedan's front driver corner got pretty crumpled — hood, fender, the works. Airbags didn't deploy in either vehicle as far as I could tell.

Here's what's messing with me: we were both signaling. Neither of us just darted over. We were coming from opposite lanes into the same opening and neither of us could really see the other until it was too late.

The other driver is saying I should've yielded because I was the larger vehicle. My insurance is being vague and just keeps saying they're "investigating." I haven't gotten any official fault determination yet.

Damage-wise mine looks worse cosmetically but it's mostly sheet metal. The sedan has some structural stuff going on near the front that concerns me — I genuinely feel bad about that part.

Has anyone dealt with a situation where fault is genuinely split or ambiguous like this? What ended up happening with your claim? I don't know if I need a lawyer yet or if this is something that resolves on its own.

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9 replies

  • 13
    hearty-dove-038

    Ugh, I had something almost identical happen on a highway on-ramp merge — both of us moving into the same space, both had signals on. My insurer ended up splitting it 50/50 with the other driver's policy. It felt unfair at first but honestly looking back it kind of made sense. Neither of us was reckless, it was just one of those awful timing situations. Hang in there.

    • 11
      careful-newt-865

      Worked claims for years. Simultaneous lane changes are genuinely one of the harder fault calls we had to make. A lot comes down to physical evidence — which vehicle's damage is more forward vs. rear, witness statements, and sometimes traffic cam or dashcam footage if it exists. The "bigger vehicle should yield" argument the other driver is making? That's not actually a traffic law anywhere I'm aware of. Size doesn't determine right-of-way. Do you have a dashcam? Even a rear-facing one might show something useful.

    • 2
      patient-owl-058

      That sounds so stressful, especially because it genuinely sounds like nobody was being reckless. Sometimes accidents are just accidents and the blame game afterward is the worst part. Hope it gets sorted out fairly for both of you.

  • 13
    candid-marmot-521

    Not legal advice, but this is exactly the kind of case where a quick free consult with a PI attorney is worth your time — especially if the other driver ends up claiming any injuries. Simultaneous lane changes with two signaling drivers is genuinely contested territory and how fault gets assigned can affect your rates and any potential claim against you. Most PI attorneys won't charge you just to talk through the situation.

  • 10
    calm-hare-089

    Most states have comparative negligence laws, which means fault doesn't have to be 100% one person. It can be 60/40, 50/50, whatever the evidence supports. If that's where your state lands, both insurance companies pay a proportional share. The structural damage on the sedan is worth paying attention to — if that driver has injuries, even delayed ones, a shared-fault situation can get more complicated. Not saying panic, just saying keep your own records tidy: photos, any communications, everything.

  • 9
    spry-elk-322

    Were there any witnesses who stopped? And do you know if there are any traffic cameras along that stretch of highway? I'm not doubting your account, but "we were both signaling" is going to be a he-said-she-said situation unless something corroborates it. Worth trying to pull that evidence before it disappears.

  • 8
    candid-vole-721

    Stop talking to the other driver's insurance without knowing what you're walking into. Their adjuster is not your friend. Get your own claim going, document every single thing, and if anyone mentions injuries — get a lawyer, full stop.

  • 5
    mellow-raven-064

    When your adjuster says they're "investigating," that's not always neutral. Sometimes they're gathering enough to pin as much as possible on you so they pay out less. Don't be chatty with them. Stick to the facts of what you observed, don't speculate about what the other driver "probably" was doing, and don't apologize to anyone in any recorded statement. That stuff gets used.

  • 2
    calm-mole-506

    I just want to flag — how are you doing physically? Sometimes in a side swipe people don't feel much right away but soft tissue stuff, especially in the neck and shoulder, can show up 24-48 hours later. If anything starts aching, please get it documented by a doctor sooner rather than later. Not for lawsuit reasons, just for your own health and your records.