RussR
En-Route
I'm sure we have a lot of USAA members on the forum, so I'm looking for any advice you might have.
I was involved in a 2-car accident this evening. (Everyone is fine.) It was at a 4-way stop sign. I stopped, let the other cars go in the order they arrived at, and then proceeded through the intersection. Most of the way through, my wife in the passenger seat screamed as the other car hit us on the right rear door. It had been the car stopped to our right, but she arrived after us and did not start moving until after we were already moving. There is construction in the intersection, so there are barricades that probably inhibited her view some.
However, the damage is pretty telling, I think. Our right rear door is caved in, and her front bumper was destroyed. We did not wait around for a police report (probably a mistake, I hope that doesn't come back to bite me). Everything seemed very amicable, I helped her duct tape her bumper so she could get on her way. I've had worse encounters over less damage...
She does have insurance, and I have the information.
I have USAA insurance. When I was filling out the claim details tonight on the app, near the end one of the questions was "do you want USAA to pay the claim, or not (i.e. do you want to take it up with their insurer)". Later research shows that if I pick USAA, then they'll do the work, pay the claim (minus my deductible), then attempt to recover costs (including the deductible) from the other insurer. I assume this is normal claim behavior.
I don't get in many accidents, and certainly not any where the fault is as seemingly clear-cut. But I assume it would be better to work with my insurer, wouldn't it? They have a certain duty to me, whereas the other driver's company would likely just try to stall me, no? But if I do use my insurer, does this show as a claim on my record for future rate increases even if I'm determined not at fault? I'll be calling tomorrow to ask similar questions. But who here has dealt with USAA in the recent past on a similar issue? (I say recent past because I've been a member for almost 30 years and recently have seen some changes I don't like.)
The other insurer is Bristol West, if that makes a difference. Never heard of them.
Note that I am certain of the sequence of events (who started and stopped when, etc.) because guess what, I do have a dashcam, and it recorded very well.
Thanks for any advice!
I was involved in a 2-car accident this evening. (Everyone is fine.) It was at a 4-way stop sign. I stopped, let the other cars go in the order they arrived at, and then proceeded through the intersection. Most of the way through, my wife in the passenger seat screamed as the other car hit us on the right rear door. It had been the car stopped to our right, but she arrived after us and did not start moving until after we were already moving. There is construction in the intersection, so there are barricades that probably inhibited her view some.
However, the damage is pretty telling, I think. Our right rear door is caved in, and her front bumper was destroyed. We did not wait around for a police report (probably a mistake, I hope that doesn't come back to bite me). Everything seemed very amicable, I helped her duct tape her bumper so she could get on her way. I've had worse encounters over less damage...
She does have insurance, and I have the information.
I have USAA insurance. When I was filling out the claim details tonight on the app, near the end one of the questions was "do you want USAA to pay the claim, or not (i.e. do you want to take it up with their insurer)". Later research shows that if I pick USAA, then they'll do the work, pay the claim (minus my deductible), then attempt to recover costs (including the deductible) from the other insurer. I assume this is normal claim behavior.
I don't get in many accidents, and certainly not any where the fault is as seemingly clear-cut. But I assume it would be better to work with my insurer, wouldn't it? They have a certain duty to me, whereas the other driver's company would likely just try to stall me, no? But if I do use my insurer, does this show as a claim on my record for future rate increases even if I'm determined not at fault? I'll be calling tomorrow to ask similar questions. But who here has dealt with USAA in the recent past on a similar issue? (I say recent past because I've been a member for almost 30 years and recently have seen some changes I don't like.)
The other insurer is Bristol West, if that makes a difference. Never heard of them.
Note that I am certain of the sequence of events (who started and stopped when, etc.) because guess what, I do have a dashcam, and it recorded very well.
Thanks for any advice!