In North Carolina, you challenge a wrongful at-fault finding by disputing the insurer’s surcharge under the Safe Driver Incentive Plan and, if needed, escalating to the Department of Insurance. If a moving violation or conviction is driving the surcharge, you may need to reopen the traffic case through a Motion for Appropriate Relief and get your driving record corrected. You can also ask the investigating agency to issue a supplemental crash report. Act promptly because insurer appeal windows and court deadlines are short.
In North Carolina, can you get your insurer to remove a surcharge when a crash report lists you at fault but you believe that’s wrong? The goal is to reverse the at-fault designation that is raising your premium. Here, the crash report says you ran off the road. You want the insurer to treat you as not at fault and clear any resulting moving violation from your record if it’s incorrect.
North Carolina uses the Safe Driver Incentive Plan (SDIP) to assign surcharge points after “chargeable” accidents or certain convictions. A crash is typically chargeable only if you were primarily at fault and the damage or injury meets a specific threshold. A police crash report is not conclusive; it is one piece of evidence. If a conviction or moving violation is on your record, that can independently trigger points unless you get the court to change the disposition. The main forums are: your insurer’s internal review, the N.C. Department of Insurance for an external complaint, and the District Court (through the Criminal Division of the Clerk of Superior Court) to correct a traffic case.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Your premium increase appears tied to a chargeable accident finding and a moving violation based on the report that you “ran off the road.” To remove the surcharge, show the insurer the accident is not chargeable under SDIP by disputing fault and, if applicable, the damage threshold. Because a moving violation is on your record, consider a MAR to correct that court disposition; if the conviction changes or is dismissed, the insurer should recalculate. Ask the investigating agency for a supplemental report, then give the updated documentation to your insurer and, if needed, the Department of Insurance.
In North Carolina, you can challenge a premium increase from an incorrect at-fault finding by disputing the insurer’s SDIP surcharge with evidence, fixing any traffic conviction through a Motion for Appropriate Relief, and asking the investigating agency for a supplemental crash report. If the insurer refuses to adjust, escalate to the Department of Insurance. The most important immediate step is to submit a written dispute to your insurer and, if applicable, file a MAR with the Clerk of Superior Court within 10 days of judgment.
If you're dealing with a wrongful at-fault finding that’s raising your North Carolina auto insurance rates, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today at 919-341-7055.
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.