In North Carolina, you can get the official collision report (DMV-349) from the law enforcement agency that investigated your crash—city police, county sheriff, or the N.C. State Highway Patrol. Have the report or incident number, date, location, and driver names ready, and expect a small copy fee. Reports are usually available within a few days, but timing and request methods vary by agency.
You’re asking how, in North Carolina, you can obtain the police crash report after officers responded to your collision, and you still don’t have the report. This matters because insurers rely on the official report for liability decisions, and it contains key facts like diagrams, narratives, and cited violations that can affect your property damage claim.
North Carolina treats law enforcement collision reports as public records. The investigating agency prepares the DMV-349 report and makes it available upon request. You typically request it from the agency’s Records Division (or, for State Highway Patrol, the District Office/records portal). Agencies may need several days to finalize and upload the report.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because officers responded to your crash, a DMV-349 should exist and is a public record. Request it from the investigating agency’s Records Division using the incident or report number from your exchange sheet; if you don’t have that, provide the date, location, and parties. The report will capture each driver’s statements and a diagram—useful given the other driver claims you turned in front of them and your insurer denied coverage.
To get your North Carolina police crash report, contact the Records Division of the agency that investigated and ask for the DMV‑349. Provide the report number (or the date, location, and names) and pay the copy fee. Reports are generally available within a few business days. Your next step: identify the investigating agency and submit your request; then send the report to your insurer for claim review.
If you’re dealing with a denied property damage claim and need the official crash report to move things forward, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today.
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.