What to Do After a Fender Bender in California: A Lawyer’s Checklist

You’re standing in a parking lot. Your bumper is dented, your hands are shaking, and the other driver is already saying, “Let’s just handle this between us.” That instinct to move on quickly? It’s the single most expensive mistake California drivers make after a minor collision.
Even a low-speed fender bender carries real legal and financial consequences in California. The steps you take in the next 30 minutes will determine whether you’re protected or stuck paying for someone else’s damage six months from now. Here’s exactly what to do, and what to avoid, from attorneys who handle these cases every week.
Key Takeaways
- California law requires you to report any accident with more than $1,000 in property damage to the DMV within 10 days. A scratched bumper on most modern cars already crosses that line.
- Whiplash and soft tissue injuries often don’t show symptoms for days after a collision. Saying “I’m fine” at the scene can hurt your claim later.
- California protects not-at-fault drivers from insurance rate increases under Insurance Code § 1861.02. Reporting the accident won’t spike your premium if you didn’t cause it.
- Never accept cash, apologize, or agree to skip the police report. These “small” decisions create massive problems when the other driver changes their story later.
Step 1: Check for Injuries, Even If You Feel Fine
Adrenaline is a liar. Your body floods with it after any collision, even a gentle rear-end tap at five miles per hour. You feel alert, maybe a little rattled, but not hurt. So you tell the other driver you’re okay. You tell yourself you’re okay. And then two days later, you can barely turn your neck.
This happens constantly. The Mayo Clinic notes that whiplash symptoms most often develop within days of the injury, not at the scene. Neck stiffness, headaches radiating from the base of your skull, shoulder pain, and even blurred vision. All of it can be delayed.
Why does this matter legally? Because if you told the other driver and the police you were “fine” and then filed an injury claim four days later, insurance adjusters will argue the injury came from something else. So at the scene, stick to neutral language. “I’m going to get checked out” is always the right answer. Even if you feel completely normal.
Step 2: Should You Call the Police for a “Minor” Fender Bender?
Yes. Almost always yes.
Here’s why. Under California Vehicle Code § 16000, you’re required to report any accident resulting in injury or property damage exceeding $1,000 to the DMV. And $1,000 in damage is basically nothing on a modern vehicle. According to CCC Intelligent Solutions’ Q4 2024 Crash Course report, the average collision repair now runs over $4,700, and 74% of all repairable claims exceed $2,000. That “little scrape” on your bumper involves paint, sensors, brackets, and recalibration. It adds up fast.
A police report creates an official record of what happened. Without one, it turns into your word against theirs. And six weeks from now, when the other driver tells their insurance company a completely different version of events, that report is the only thing standing between you and a denied claim.
Why “Let’s Not Involve Insurance” Is a Red Flag
When the other driver says this, pay attention. Sometimes they’re genuinely trying to keep things simple. But often it means they’re uninsured, their license is suspended, or they’re worried about a DUI on their record. Agreeing to handle things privately strips away every protection you have.
You don’t need to be confrontational about it. A simple “my insurance requires me to report any incident” shuts down the conversation without creating conflict. It’s also true for most policies.
Step 3: Document Everything Like Your Claim Depends on It
Because it does.
Most people snap three photos and call it good. That’s not enough. Insurance adjusters want specific evidence, and if you don’t collect it at the scene, it disappears. Skid marks get driven over. Debris gets swept up. The other driver’s cracked tail light gets fixed before anyone thinks to look at it.
Here’s what to photograph:
- All four corners of both vehicles, plus close-ups of every area of damage
- Both license plates are clearly readable
- VIN numbers visible through both windshields
- Street signs or landmarks that establish the location
- The other driver’s insurance card and driver’s license (photograph both, don’t just write the info down)
- Any skid marks, debris, or fluid on the ground
- Undamaged areas of your car, too (this proves pre-existing damage wasn’t from this accident)
Beyond photos, grab witness contact information before they leave. Note the weather, road conditions, time of day, and traffic flow. If you’re in a parking lot, write down the business name and where in the lot the accident happened. All of this fades from memory within hours.
Step 4: File the California SR-1 Form
This is the part most articles mention but never actually explain.
The DMV SR-1 (Report of Traffic Accident) is a separate requirement from any police report. You have 10 days from the accident to file it with the California DMV. Miss that window and your driving privilege can be suspended. Not a hypothetical. An actual suspension.
You can file it online through the DMV’s virtual office or submit a paper form by mail. The form asks for details about both drivers, insurance information, and an estimate of damage. If you’re unsure about the damage amount, write “$1,000+” and let the body shop figure out the exact number later. The worst move here is lowballing the estimate to avoid the reporting threshold. Modern vehicles have computers, cameras, and sensors behind every panel. That “small dent” often turns into a $3,000 repair once the shop opens it up.
What NOT to Do After a Fender Bender
The at-the-scene mistakes matter more than most people realize. Here are the ones that kill claims:
Never apologize or admit fault. Even “I’m sorry this happened” can be used against you. Stick to “Are you okay?” and “Let me get your information.” That’s it.
Don’t let them rush you. The other driver who “has to get to work” and wants to “just exchange numbers real quick” is, whether they know it or not, pressuring you to skip steps that protect you. Take your time.
Don’t accept cash or make side deals. There’s no paper trail. They can still file a claim against your insurance while you can’t prove the deal existed. And if injuries show up weeks later, you have zero recourse.
Don’t post about it on social media. Insurance companies monitor claimants’ accounts. A post saying “crazy day but I’m fine!” directly contradicts a later injury claim.
What Should You Do in the Week After a Fender Bender?
Within 24 hours: See a doctor. Even if you feel fine. This creates the medical documentation that links any symptoms to the accident. A gap in treatment gives insurance companies the argument they need to deny your claim.
Within 10 days: File the SR-1 form with the DMV. Set a reminder. Don’t assume your insurance company handles this for you (they might, but you’re the one who loses your license if it doesn’t get done).
Within 30 days: Watch for delayed symptoms. Headaches, neck stiffness, back pain, trouble sleeping, and anxiety while driving. If any of these develop, see your doctor and tell them about the accident.
When Does a Fender Bender Need a Lawyer?
Most don’t. If nobody is hurt, the fault is clear, and insurance cooperates, you can probably handle things yourself.
But certain situations change that math. If the other driver is disputing what happened. If your claim is getting denied or lowballed. If you’re feeling any pain at all, even mild. If the other driver was uninsured. If you’re being pressured to settle fast. Any of these should trigger a conversation with an attorney.
California follows pure comparative negligence, which means you can recover damages even if you were partially at fault. Your compensation just gets reduced by your share of the blame. So being 20% at fault doesn’t wipe out your claim. It reduces it by 20%.
A personal injury attorney handles the insurance negotiations, documents injuries properly, calculates the real cost of damage (including diminished vehicle value that most people don’t know they can claim), and protects you from recorded statements that insurance companies use to undercut your case.
FAQ: California Fender Bender Questions
Do I need to call the police for a fender bender in California? If there’s any injury or property damage over $1,000, yes. And given what modern repairs cost, that threshold covers almost every fender bender on the road today.
Will my insurance rates go up if I report a fender bender? Not if you’re not at fault. California’s Proposition 103 regulations prohibit insurers from raising your rates based on accidents where you weren’t the primary cause.
Can I settle a fender bender without involving insurance? Legally, yes. Practically, it’s risky. The other driver can still file a claim against your policy, while you have no documentation that any deal existed. And if injuries show up later, you’re unprotected.
Following these steps won’t undo the accident, but they protect you from the financial and legal fallout that catches so many California drivers off guard. If things get complicated, if fault is disputed or injuries start surfacing, DK Law offers free consultations for fender bender cases across all 13+ California locations. No obligation, no pressure. Just an honest assessment of where you stand.
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