Truck Accident, Totaled Car, Zero Payout: How Insurers Fight Claims
Your car is wrecked, the truck is still on the road, and the trucking insurer says it will not pay. That is the nightmare behind many truck accident claims: a commercial carrier denies fault, blames you, questions your injuries, points to missing records, or claims there was no valid coverage.
A truck accident can end with no payment if the insurer successfully disputes liability, coverage, damages, deadlines, or proof. A denial letter is not proof that the insurer is right, but it is a warning that the company is building a defense while your repair bills, medical bills, rental costs, and missed work keep growing.
Table of Contents
- Quick Answer: Why Can a Truck Accident Claim End With Zero Payout?
- How Truck Insurers Fight Claims
- Mistakes That Can Turn a Truck Claim Into Zero Payout
- Blame Shifting and Comparative Fault
- Missing Evidence Can Kill a Truck Accident Claim
- Coverage Gaps, Policy Lapses and Exclusions
- The Independent Contractor Defense
- Medical Gaps and Pre-Existing Injury Arguments
- MCS-90 and Federal Trucking Insurance
- What to Do After a Truck Claim Denial
- How to Preserve Truck Crash Evidence
- Using Your Own Insurance After a Denial
- Bottom Line
- Related Car Accident Guides
- Frequently Asked Questions FAQ’s
Quick Answer: Why Can a Truck Accident Claim End With Zero Payout?
A truck accident claim can end with zero payout when the insurance company says the truck driver was not at fault, you were mostly responsible, the policy did not cover the trip, the driver was unauthorized, evidence is missing, your injuries are unrelated, or a deadline was missed.
The Hard Truth
Commercial trucking claims are not automatically easy just because the truck is larger or the damage is severe. The trucking company, insurer, broker, cargo company, driver, maintenance provider, and their lawyers may all have different interests in limiting what gets paid.
There is no reliable public national percentage showing exactly how many commercial truck claims are denied because insurers and fleets generally do not publish complete internal denial data. What is clear is that truck claims often involve more parties, more records, more coverage questions, and more opportunities for the insurer to challenge payment than a routine two-car crash.
How Truck Insurers Fight Claims
Truck insurers do not need to prove that nothing happened. They only need enough uncertainty to deny responsibility, reduce payment, delay settlement, or make the claim difficult to pursue.
Common Defense Strategies
- Claiming the car driver caused the crash
- Arguing that you changed lanes, stopped suddenly, or drove in the truck’s blind spot
- Using comparative fault rules to reduce or eliminate payment
- Questioning whether the truck driver was working for the company
- Claiming the driver was an independent contractor
- Arguing the truck was not covered under the policy at the time
- Blaming a broker, shipper, trailer owner, cargo company, or maintenance provider instead
- Questioning whether injuries came from the crash
- Delaying until records disappear or witnesses become harder to find
- Making a low offer before the full medical or repair cost is known
Delay Can Be a Defense
The longer a truck claim sits without evidence being preserved, the easier it becomes for the insurer to say there is not enough proof. Video may be overwritten, witnesses may disappear, vehicles may be repaired, and electronic records may become harder to obtain.
Mistakes That Can Turn a Truck Claim Into Zero Payout
| Mistake | Better Move | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Talking freely to the trucking insurer before understanding the facts | Stick to basic facts and avoid guessing about fault or injuries | Early statements can be used to support blame-shifting arguments. |
| Waiting to request truck video or electronic records | Ask for evidence preservation quickly | Camera footage, ELD data, and crash records may not be available forever. |
| Skipping medical care because pain seems minor | Get evaluated and document symptoms promptly | Insurers may argue delayed treatment means the injury was unrelated. |
| Accepting a quick check for property damage or injuries | Understand what the release covers before signing | A release can end your right to seek more money later. |
| Assuming the truck company has valid insurance | Verify carrier and insurance information | Policy lapses, wrong entities, and coverage disputes can complicate claims. |
Blame Shifting and Comparative Fault
One of the fastest ways a truck insurer can reduce or deny a payout is by blaming the car owner. Even when the truck caused most of the damage, the insurer may argue that you contributed to the crash.
Depending on the state, comparative fault rules can reduce your payment by your share of fault. In some states, being found at or above a specified percentage of fault can prevent recovery from the other side entirely.
Arguments Insurers May Use Against Car Owners
- You entered the truck’s blind spot
- You merged too closely
- You braked suddenly
- You were speeding
- You were distracted
- You failed to yield
- You changed lanes without signaling
- You were using a phone
- You could have avoided the impact
- You caused a chain-reaction crash
Fault Is Not Always Obvious
Truck crashes can involve wide turns, blind spots, braking distance, cargo movement, lane restrictions, road design, weather, and multiple vehicles. The first story told after the crash is not always the final fault decision.
For more on shared-fault disputes, read Insurance Says I’m 50% at Fault: Meaning, Payouts & What to Do Next.
Missing Evidence Can Kill a Truck Accident Claim
Truck claims often depend on evidence that ordinary drivers do not know exists. If no one preserves it quickly, the insurer may later say there is no proof of fatigue, speeding, unsafe driving, improper loading, or company negligence.
Evidence That May Matter
- Police crash report
- Photos of all vehicles, damage, skid marks, debris, and road conditions
- Dashcam footage
- Truck dashcam or forward-facing fleet camera footage
- Electronic logging device records
- Engine control module or event data recorder information
- GPS and dispatch records
- Driver qualification records
- Hours-of-service records
- Truck inspection reports
- Maintenance and repair records
- Cargo loading records
- Weight tickets
- Witness statements
- Drug and alcohol testing records when applicable
- Cell phone records where legally obtainable
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration guidance says motor carriers generally must retain electronic logging device records of duty status and supporting documents for six months. That does not mean every trucking record is automatically handed to an injured driver, but it is one reason evidence preservation should happen quickly. FMCSA ELD record retention guidance provides the official rule summary.
Evidence Tip
Keep your own photos, dashcam footage, medical records, repair estimates, tow records, and witness contacts in more than one place. Do not assume the trucking company or insurer will preserve evidence for you.
Coverage Gaps, Policy Lapses and Exclusions
Sometimes the truck caused the crash but the insurer still disputes payment because of a coverage problem. The carrier may claim the policy lapsed, the wrong vehicle was listed, the driver was not authorized, the truck was outside the permitted operation, or the company named in the claim was not the insured motor carrier.
Coverage Problems That Can Complicate Claims
- Expired or canceled commercial auto policy
- Truck operating under a different company name
- Lease operator or owner-operator confusion
- Unlisted or unauthorized driver
- Trailer owned by another company
- Broker, carrier, and shipper pointing blame at one another
- Interstate versus intrastate operation questions
- Insurance limits that do not cover all losses
- Multiple injured people competing for the same policy limits
- Disputes about whether the driver was on duty
Coverage Dispute Warning
A trucking insurer saying “there is no coverage” does not automatically end every possible claim. The problem may involve a different insurer, a different company, another responsible party, your own policy, or federal financial responsibility rules.
You can use the FMCSA Licensing and Insurance system to look up carrier authority and insurance-related information using a USDOT or MC number when available.
The Independent Contractor Defense
Trucking companies may argue that the driver was an independent contractor rather than an employee. That argument can be used to distance the company from the driver’s conduct and push responsibility toward a smaller owner-operator or another entity.
But the label “independent contractor” does not always decide the case. The facts may matter more: who controlled the work, who dispatched the truck, who owned the trailer, whose logo was on the vehicle, who set the route, who maintained the truck, and who held operating authority.
Questions That May Matter
- Whose name was displayed on the truck?
- Who employed or contracted with the driver?
- Who dispatched the load?
- Who owned the tractor and trailer?
- Who controlled delivery deadlines?
- Who maintained the vehicle?
- Who held the operating authority?
- Who carried the relevant insurance?
- Who hired the driver?
- Who controlled safety policies?
Entity Confusion Is Common
A truck crash may involve a driver, owner-operator, carrier, broker, shipper, trailer owner, maintenance contractor, and insurer. Getting the correct legal entity matters before you accept a denial or release.
Medical Gaps and Pre-Existing Injury Arguments
Truck insurers often scrutinize medical records because injury claims can be expensive. A gap in treatment, a prior injury, a missed appointment, or a vague medical record can become part of the defense.
Arguments Insurers May Raise
- Your pain started before the crash
- You waited too long to seek treatment
- Your symptoms are unrelated to the collision
- You had a pre-existing back, neck, shoulder, or head injury
- The crash impact was too minor to cause the claimed injury
- You missed appointments or did not follow treatment recommendations
- Your records do not clearly connect the injury to the truck accident
Documentation Warning
Do not exaggerate symptoms, but do not minimize them either. If you are hurt, get appropriate medical care and make sure the provider knows the injury followed a truck crash.
MCS-90 and Federal Trucking Insurance
The MCS-90 endorsement is a federal motor carrier insurance endorsement tied to certain interstate for-hire motor carrier operations. It is designed to help ensure that a qualifying motor carrier has financial responsibility for public liability under federal regulations.
It is not a magic shortcut that guarantees every truck crash victim a payout. The endorsement has limits, depends on the carrier and operation involved, and does not automatically make every party or every policy dispute disappear.
FMCSA explains that Form MCS-90 is an endorsement for motor carrier public liability policies under federal law and regulation. FMCSA also states that the endorsement is not intended to require an insurer to satisfy a judgment against a party other than the named motor carrier or fiduciary. Review the official FMCSA MCS-90 overview and FMCSA guidance on the named insured.
MCS-90 Reality
MCS-90 may be relevant when a qualifying interstate motor carrier has a coverage dispute, but it is technical and fact-specific. It should not be treated as an automatic promise of payment.
What to Do After a Truck Claim Denial
A denial letter can feel final, especially when your vehicle is totaled. It is not always final. The first step is to identify exactly what the insurer denied and why.
Truck Claim Denial Checklist
- Get the denial in writing: Ask for the exact reason, policy language, facts, and evidence the insurer relied on.
- Do not ignore deadlines: Check court, appeal, policy, and government notice deadlines quickly.
- Save every document: Keep letters, emails, claim notes, estimates, medical records, photos, and repair records.
- Request the claim file when appropriate: Ask what records, photos, statements, or reports were used to deny the claim.
- Identify all possible parties: Driver, carrier, owner-operator, broker, shipper, maintenance company, trailer owner, and manufacturer may matter.
- Preserve evidence: Ask for truck video, ELD records, inspection reports, electronic data, dispatch records, and maintenance documents to be preserved.
- Check your own coverage: Collision, medical payments, personal injury protection, uninsured motorist, and underinsured motorist coverage may help.
- Do not sign a release without understanding it: A release may end more claims than you realize.
- Consider legal advice for serious losses: Truck cases can involve federal and state rules, multiple companies, and evidence that is difficult to obtain without formal action.
For denial-letter basics, read Insurance Denial Letter? 9 Things to Check Before You Give Up.
How to Preserve Truck Crash Evidence
Evidence preservation is one of the biggest differences between a truck crash and an ordinary car accident. A formal preservation request, often called a spoliation letter, can ask the carrier and related parties not to destroy records or equipment that may matter to the case.
A preservation request does not guarantee that every document will be produced, and legal rules vary by state. But waiting until after the truck is repaired, the video is overwritten, or the records are discarded can make a difficult claim even harder.
Records Commonly Worth Preserving
- Truck dashcam and fleet camera footage
- ELD and hours-of-service records
- Electronic control module data
- GPS location data
- Dispatch messages
- Driver cell phone records where legally available
- Driver qualification files
- Inspection and maintenance logs
- Drug and alcohol testing documents where applicable
- Cargo loading records
- Post-crash inspection records
- Photographs taken by the carrier or insurer
- Insurance and lease documents
Practical Tip
Write down the truck’s USDOT number, MC number, plate number, trailer number, company name, and driver name at the scene if you can do so safely. These details can make later carrier and insurance research much easier.
Using Your Own Insurance After a Denial
If the trucking insurer denies or delays your claim, your own auto policy may be the fastest path to getting repairs or some medical costs handled, depending on your coverage.
Coverage That May Help
- Collision coverage for vehicle damage
- Uninsured motorist property damage where available
- Underinsured motorist coverage if the truck policy is not enough
- Medical payments coverage
- Personal injury protection in applicable states
- Rental reimbursement coverage
- Gap coverage if the vehicle is totaled and financed
Your insurer may pay under your own policy and then try to recover from the trucking company or another responsible party through subrogation. That does not erase your deductible automatically, but recovery may eventually affect whether you get it back.
Do Not Wait for the Other Insurer Forever
If you have collision coverage and need your car repaired or replaced, ask your insurer whether opening your own claim makes sense. You can still dispute fault and pursue the responsible parties later.
For totaled-car issues, read Totaled Car Insurance Guide: Payouts, Gap Coverage & Keeping Your Car.
Bottom Line
Truck accident claims can end in zero payout when insurers win the argument over fault, coverage, deadlines, evidence, injuries, or who actually controlled the truck. The damage may be obvious, but payment is not automatic.
Best Move After a Denial
Get the denial reason in writing, preserve truck evidence immediately, verify the carrier and insurance information, review your own policy, and do not accept “no coverage” as the end of the story until you understand exactly what was denied and why.
Related Car Accident Guides
Use these PolicyPorch guides to understand denied claims, fault arguments, low offers, total loss disputes, deadlines, and insurance recovery after a crash.
- Insurance Denial Letter? 9 Things to Check Before You Give Up
- Hidden Insurance Exclusions: Fine Print That Can Wreck a Claim
- Insurance Adjuster Lowballed You? Don’t Accept Until You Check These Numbers
- Insurance Says I’m 50% at Fault: Meaning, Payouts & What to Do Next
- Multiple Car Pile-Up Claims: How Insurance Divides the Blame
- Insurance Company Delaying Your Claim? Bad Faith Warning Signs
- Car Accident Statute of Limitations by State
- How Long After a Car Accident Can You Sue?
- Cash Offer After a Car Accident: Pros, Cons & Smart Decision Guide
- Diminished Value Claims: How to Recover Your Car's Lost Value After an Accident
- Hit-and-Run Accident: Which Insurance Pays When the Driver Vanishes?
- Uninsured Motorist Coverage
- What to Do After a Car Accident
- Who Covers Car Repairs If You're At Fault in an Accident?
- Should You Get a Lawyer After a Car Accident?
Frequently Asked Questions FAQ’s
Why would a truck accident claim get denied?
A truck accident claim may be denied when the insurer disputes fault, says there is no active coverage, argues you caused the crash, questions your injuries, or claims important evidence is missing.
Can a trucking company deny responsibility because the driver was an independent contractor?
It may try to, but the label alone does not always decide liability. Ownership, dispatch control, operating authority, maintenance, safety rules, and who controlled the work may all matter.
What is the MCS-90 endorsement?
MCS-90 is a federal public-liability insurance endorsement that can be relevant to certain interstate for-hire motor carrier operations. It is technical and does not automatically guarantee payment for every truck crash claim.
Can I use my own insurance if the trucking insurer refuses to pay?
Yes, your collision, uninsured motorist, underinsured motorist, medical payments, personal injury protection, or rental coverage may help depending on your policy and state.
How long do trucking companies keep ELD records?
FMCSA guidance generally requires motor carriers to retain ELD records of duty status and supporting documents for six months. Other records may have different retention rules.
Can a truck insurer blame me for the crash?
Yes. Truck insurers often investigate whether the car driver merged unsafely, drove in a blind spot, braked suddenly, sped, failed to yield, or contributed to the collision in another way.
What should I do if my truck accident claim is denied?
Get the denial reason in writing, preserve evidence, review the policy language, identify all possible responsible parties, check your own coverage, and consider legal advice for serious injuries or major property loss.
Can a truck accident claim be reopened after denial?
Sometimes. A claim may be reconsidered when new evidence appears, the insurer made a factual error, another responsible party is identified, or the denial is challenged through the insurer’s review process or legal action.




