Saturday, May 23, 2026

Friend Crashed My Car: Will Insurance Cover It?

Friend Crashed My Car: Will Insurance Cover It?

Friend Crashed My Car: Will My Insurance Cover It?

Letting a friend borrow your car can feel harmless until they crash it. Suddenly the questions come fast: whose insurance pays, will your rates go up, what if your friend is not listed on your policy, and what happens if their license is expired?


In many cases, car insurance follows the car first. That means your policy may be the primary coverage if your friend had permission to drive, was not excluded from your policy, and was using the car for a covered personal reason. But there are important exceptions, especially for excluded drivers, no permission, expired licenses, commercial use, delivery driving, intoxication, and policies with strict driver restrictions.

Legal note: This article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Every case is different. Consult a qualified attorney for advice about your specific situation.

Table of Contents

Quick Answer

If your friend borrowed your car with permission and crashed it, your car insurance will usually be the first policy involved. Your collision coverage may pay for damage to your car, minus your deductible, while your liability coverage may pay for injuries or property damage your friend caused to others. If the damages exceed your policy limits, your friend’s insurance may sometimes act as secondary coverage.

Bottom line: when you lend your car, you may also be lending your insurance. Before letting someone drive, make sure they are licensed, responsible, not excluded from your policy, and not using your car for delivery, rideshare, or another excluded activity.

Friend Crash Rules at a Glance

A friend crashing your car can trigger your insurance, your friend’s insurance, the other driver’s insurance, or a claim dispute. The result depends on permission, coverage, fault, policy wording, and state law.

Never Assume ❌ Check Instead ✅
Your friend’s insurance automatically pays first Your policy usually pays first when your car is being driven with permission
Any friend can drive your car and be covered Check excluded drivers, household-driver rules, license status, and policy restrictions
Liability insurance pays for your own car damage You usually need collision coverage for damage to your own vehicle
A denied claim means you have no options Ask for the denial in writing and review your policy or speak with an attorney
Your rates will never change because you were not driving A claim on your policy can still affect your premiums

How Insurance Works If Your Friend Crashes Your Car

Most personal auto policies include some form of permissive use, meaning someone who has your permission to drive your car may be covered under your policy. This is why your own insurance is often the first place the claim goes, even if you were not behind the wheel.

That does not mean every situation is covered. A friend who took the car without permission, has an expired or suspended license, is excluded from your policy, lives with you but was never disclosed, or was using the car for business delivery can create serious coverage problems.

What “insurance follows the car” means

When people say insurance follows the car, they usually mean the vehicle owner’s policy is primary for a covered accident involving that vehicle. If your friend had permission and your policy allows permissive drivers, your insurer may handle the claim first.

What “permissive use” means

Permissive use means you allowed someone to drive your car. Permission can be express, such as handing them the keys, or implied, such as regularly allowing them to use the car. Some policies limit permissive-use coverage, so check your policy language.

Real-world discussion: If a friend crashes your car, what are the consequences?. Forum posts can be helpful for perspective, but your policy and state law control your actual claim.

When Your Policy Pays First

Your insurance is most likely to pay first when your friend had permission, the car was being used for a covered personal purpose, and your policy does not exclude that driver or situation.

Collision coverage

If you carry collision coverage, it can help pay to repair or replace your car after a crash, even if your friend caused the accident. You usually pay the deductible first. If you do not have collision coverage, your insurer may not pay for your own car damage.

Liability coverage

If your friend caused injuries or damage to someone else, your liability coverage may pay up to your policy limits. That can include another driver’s car repairs, medical bills, or property damage, depending on the claim.

Medical payments or personal injury protection

Depending on your state and coverage, medical payments coverage or personal injury protection may help pay medical costs for occupants of your car, including your friend, regardless of fault.

Coverage Type What It May Pay Important Limit
Collision Damage to your own car Only applies if you purchased collision coverage; deductible usually applies
Liability Damage or injuries your friend caused to others Only pays up to your policy limits
Comprehensive Non-collision losses like theft, hail, fire, or animal damage Usually not the main coverage for a friend-caused crash
Medical payments or PIP Medical bills for covered occupants Rules vary by state and policy
Uninsured motorist Injuries or damage caused by an uninsured at-fault driver May not apply if your friend was the at-fault driver

When Your Friend’s Insurance May Pay

Your friend’s auto insurance may sometimes provide secondary coverage. This can happen if your policy limits are not enough to cover the damage or injuries, or if your friend’s policy includes coverage for driving a non-owned car.

Secondary liability coverage

If your liability limits are exhausted, your friend’s policy may help cover remaining third-party claims if their policy applies. This depends heavily on the policy language and state rules.

Damage to your car

Whether your friend’s policy can pay for damage to your car is more complicated. Some policies may extend certain coverage to non-owned vehicles, but it is not guaranteed. If you do not have collision coverage, you may need to ask your friend’s insurer whether any non-owned auto coverage applies.

If your friend was not at fault

If another driver caused the crash, that driver’s liability insurance should generally be responsible for damages. Your insurer may still help if you have collision coverage and want faster repairs, then seek recovery from the at-fault insurer later.

Claim tip: report the crash to your insurer and get your friend’s insurance information too. Even if your policy is primary, your friend’s policy may matter if damages exceed your limits.

What If Your Friend’s License Is Expired?

An expired license makes the claim riskier. Some insurers may still investigate coverage if your friend had permission, but an expired, suspended, revoked, or invalid license can create coverage disputes, policy violations, and legal problems.

Expired license vs suspended license

An expired license may mean your friend simply failed to renew it. A suspended or revoked license usually means the state removed their driving privilege due to tickets, DUI, unpaid fines, medical issues, or other reasons. Insurers may treat these situations differently, but both can complicate a claim.

Could insurance deny the claim?

Possibly. Some policies exclude coverage when the driver is unlicensed, not legally allowed to drive, or using the car without proper permission. Other policies may still cover certain losses but reserve the right to investigate, deny part of the claim, or pursue recovery. Ask the insurer for a written explanation if coverage is denied.

Could you be personally responsible?

If you knowingly let an unlicensed or unsafe driver use your car, you could face serious financial and legal consequences. In some cases, injured parties may argue negligent entrustment, meaning you should not have trusted that person with the vehicle.

Important: never lend your car to someone if you know their license is expired, suspended, revoked, or invalid. A quick favor can turn into a denied claim or lawsuit.

What If Your Friend Is Not Listed on Insurance?

A friend does not always need to be listed on your policy to be covered for occasional permissive use. Many policies allow occasional drivers who do not live in your household. But that is different from a regular driver or household member.

Occasional friend driver

If your friend borrowed the car once or rarely, had permission, and is not excluded, your policy may provide coverage under permissive use.

Household member or regular driver

If your friend lives with you, uses your car often, or should have been listed on the policy, your insurer may argue that they were an undisclosed driver. That can lead to claim complications, premium adjustments, or denial depending on the policy.

Excluded driver

If your friend is specifically excluded from your policy, your insurer may deny coverage if they crash your car. An excluded driver is one of the clearest danger zones in auto insurance.

When Insurance May Deny the Claim

Not every friend-caused crash is covered. Insurers look at permission, driver status, vehicle use, policy exclusions, and whether the claim facts match the policy.

More likely to be covered

  • Your friend had clear permission to drive.
  • The friend was licensed and legally allowed to drive.
  • The car was used for personal reasons.
  • The friend is not excluded from your policy.
  • Your policy includes permissive-use coverage.
  • You have collision coverage for your own car damage.

More likely to cause problems

  • Your friend took the car without permission.
  • Your friend has an expired, suspended, or revoked license.
  • Your friend is an excluded driver.
  • Your friend lives with you but was not disclosed.
  • The car was used for rideshare or delivery work.
  • The crash involved alcohol, drugs, racing, or criminal conduct.
  • You only carry liability coverage and need your own car repaired.

No permission

If your friend took your car without permission, the claim may be handled differently. It could become a theft, unauthorized use, or liability dispute. Tell your insurer the truth and do not claim permission existed if it did not.

Commercial use

If your friend was using your car for delivery, rideshare, courier work, or business use, a personal auto policy may exclude the claim. Commercial use is one of the most common reasons ordinary policies fail to protect drivers.

Excluded driver

If your policy lists your friend as an excluded driver, the insurer may not cover the crash. Exclusions are serious and should never be ignored.

Deductibles, Rate Increases and Liability

Even if insurance covers the accident, you may still feel the financial hit. The claim usually goes on your policy if your insurance pays first.

Who pays the deductible?

Your insurer will usually subtract your collision deductible from the repair payment. You can ask your friend to reimburse the deductible, but the insurance company may not force them to pay you. If they refuse, you may need to handle it privately or through legal options.

Will your insurance go up?

It can. If your policy pays for an at-fault crash caused by your friend, your insurer may treat it as an at-fault claim on your policy. Premium impact depends on your insurer, state, driving history, claim size, accident forgiveness, and policy rules.

Can you sue your friend?

In some cases, you may be able to pursue your friend for your deductible, uncovered damages, or losses your insurance did not pay. Whether that is worth it depends on the amount, your relationship, fault facts, and legal options in your state.

What To Do After Your Friend Crashes Your Car

Handle the crash the same way you would if you were driving. The more organized you are, the easier the insurance claim becomes.

1. Make sure everyone is safe

Check for injuries, call emergency services if needed, and move to a safe location if the car is creating a road hazard.

2. Document the scene

Take photos of vehicle damage, license plates, driver information, road signs, skid marks, weather, traffic lights, and the surrounding area.

3. Get your friend’s details

Record your friend’s license information, insurance policy information, phone number, address, and a written explanation of what happened.

4. File a police report if needed

A report is especially important if there are injuries, major damage, another vehicle involved, suspected intoxication, expired license concerns, or disagreement about fault.

5. Contact your insurance company

Report the accident promptly. Explain that your friend was driving, whether they had permission, where they were going, and whether they are a household member or occasional driver.

6. Ask which coverages apply

Ask about collision, liability, medical payments, rental reimbursement, deductible, rate impact, and whether your friend’s policy should be contacted as secondary coverage.

Best protection before lending your car: check that the driver has a valid license, ask whether they have their own insurance, confirm they are not excluded from your policy, and never lend your car for delivery or rideshare work unless your policy covers it.

These related guides can help you understand liability, teen drivers, car accident claims, passenger risk, uninsured motorist protection, and crash evidence.

Frequently Asked Questions FAQ’s

How does insurance work if your friend crashes your car?

In many cases, your insurance pays first because the policy follows the car. If your friend had permission and is not excluded, your collision coverage may pay for your car, and your liability coverage may pay for damage or injuries caused to others.

What happens if my friend gets into an accident with my car?

You should report the accident to your insurer, document the damage, collect your friend’s license and insurance information, and ask which coverages apply. If your policy pays, you may owe the deductible and your future premiums may increase.

What if my friend borrowed my car and crashed it?

If your friend borrowed the car with permission, your policy will usually be the primary insurance. If damages exceed your limits, your friend’s insurance may sometimes provide secondary coverage, depending on their policy.

What happens if a driver is not listed on insurance?

An occasional friend who does not live with you may still be covered under permissive use. But a household member, regular driver, or excluded driver who is not properly listed can create coverage problems or a claim denial.

What if my friend’s license is expired?

An expired license can complicate the claim and may give the insurer a reason to investigate or deny coverage, depending on policy language and state law. A suspended or revoked license is even more serious. Never lend your car to someone who is not legally allowed to drive.

Will my insurance go up if my friend crashes my car?

It can. If your insurance pays for an at-fault accident involving your car, the claim may affect your premium even though you were not driving. The impact depends on your insurer, state, policy, accident forgiveness, and claim history.

Who pays the deductible if my friend crashes my car?

Your policy deductible usually applies if you use collision coverage for your car. You can ask your friend to reimburse you, but that is usually a private matter unless there is a separate legal claim.

Can insurance deny a claim if my friend was driving?

Yes, possible denial reasons include no permission, excluded driver, invalid license, commercial use, rideshare or delivery work, fraud, racing, intentional damage, or policy restrictions. Ask for any denial in writing.

Updated: May 23, 2026

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