In North Carolina, making a claim after a car accident with no physical injury can affect your insurance in some situations, but it depends on why you are making the claim and how the crash is classified. A claim under your own policy (like collision coverage) can be treated differently than a claim made against the other driver’s liability coverage. Even when you are not at fault, insurers may still consider claim history when they review your policy at renewal.
If you were in a North Carolina car accident and you are not reporting any physical injury, you may be asking whether you can make a property-damage-only claim without risking higher premiums or losing coverage, especially if you need repairs paid for now. In your situation, one key fact is that you report no physical injury, which usually means the claim focus is vehicle damage and related out-of-pocket losses rather than medical treatment.
North Carolina auto insurance is built around different “buckets” of coverage. A non-injury crash claim usually falls into (1) a claim against the at-fault driver’s liability coverage for property damage, or (2) a claim under your own policy (for example, collision coverage) with your insurer potentially seeking reimbursement from the at-fault driver’s insurer later. Whether your rates or coverage change is largely an underwriting and rating question tied to fault, claim type, and your policy’s terms, but North Carolina law also sets rules about minimum required liability coverage and how certain accident-related issues are handled.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because you report no physical injury, your claim is likely focused on property damage (vehicle repairs/total loss issues, towing, rental, and similar losses). If you make the claim against the other driver’s liability insurance, your own insurer may not pay anything, which often reduces the chance your own policy is directly impacted. If you use your own collision coverage to get repairs moving, that is a first-party claim on your policy and may be considered in renewal underwriting even if you were not at fault.
In North Carolina, a non-injury car accident claim can affect your insurance rates or coverage depending on whether you make a claim under your own policy, how fault is determined, and how your insurer evaluates claim history at renewal. Property-damage settlements also need careful paperwork, because a written release can control what you are giving up. Next step: report the claim promptly to the correct insurer and review any settlement release carefully before you sign it.
If you're dealing with a North Carolina car crash where you were not physically injured but still have vehicle damage and insurance issues, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Reach out today. Call [CONTACT NUMBER].
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.