In North Carolina, you can still pursue a property-damage claim even if you were not physically injured. Most people start by opening a claim with the at-fault driver’s liability insurer (or with their own collision coverage) and documenting repair costs, towing/storage, and reasonable “loss of use” expenses like a rental. If the insurer disputes fault, the amount, or delays payment, you may need to escalate with a demand package, pre-suit mediation, or a lawsuit filed before the statute of limitations runs.
If you were in a North Carolina car crash and you are not hurt, can you still make the other driver (or an insurance company) pay for your vehicle repairs and related out-of-pocket costs when the key issue is who was at fault?
North Carolina law allows a person to recover money for damage to their vehicle and other crash-related property losses when another driver’s negligence caused the collision. In practice, that usually means making a third-party claim against the at-fault driver’s liability insurance, or using your own collision coverage and letting your insurer pursue reimbursement (often called subrogation). If you accept a property-damage-only settlement, North Carolina law generally treats that as settling only the property claim unless the written settlement clearly says it settles everything.
Two legal pressure points matter early: (1) North Carolina’s strict contributory negligence rule (if the other side can prove you contributed to the crash, it can bar recovery), and (2) the filing deadline for a lawsuit for property damage, which is typically three years.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Here, you report no physical injury, but you still may have a valid North Carolina property-damage claim if the other driver was at fault and you can document your repair bill and related costs. The insurer’s first focus is usually fault (including whether it can argue you contributed to the crash) and then the amount (repair vs. total loss valuation, rental/loss-of-use, towing, and storage). If the adjuster disputes either point, you may need to build a stronger written record and be prepared to escalate before the three-year filing deadline.
In North Carolina, you can pursue payment for vehicle repairs and related crash costs even when you have no injury, as long as you can prove the other driver was at fault and you were not contributorily negligent. The practical path is to document every expense, submit a clear property-damage demand to the insurer, and avoid signing a broad release that settles more than property damage. If the claim does not resolve, the key next step is to file a lawsuit in the proper North Carolina court before the three-year deadline.
If you’re dealing with a North Carolina car wreck where there’s no injury but you still need repairs, towing, rental, or other accident-related costs covered, a personal injury attorney can help you organize proof, address contributory negligence arguments, and protect your filing deadlines. Reach out 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.