No Police ReportUpdated March 2026

Car Accident Without a Police Report in Nashville: Can You Still File a Claim?

Yes, you can still file an insurance claim or personal injury lawsuit in Tennessee even without a police report. While a police report strengthens your case, it is not legally required to pursue compensation for your injuries. Tennessee law (TCA 55-10-106) requires you to report accidents involving injury or property damage over $50 to local law enforcement, but failing to do so does not forfeit your right to file a civil claim. You do need strong alternative evidence. Here is how to build your case without a police report in Nashville.

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Key Takeaways

  • A police report is NOT legally required to file an insurance claim or personal injury lawsuit in Tennessee.
  • Tennessee law (TCA 55-10-106) requires reporting accidents involving injury or $50+ in property damage to local law enforcement — but this is a separate obligation from your right to seek compensation.
  • Medical records, photographs, witness statements, and dashcam footage can substitute for a police report as evidence.
  • Tennessee's statute of limitations is just 1 year (TCA 28-3-104) — do not delay gathering evidence or filing your claim.
  • Without a police report, the other driver can more easily dispute fault. Tennessee's 50% bar rule (TCA 29-11-103) means losing the fault argument could cost you everything.
  • You can file a late police report with Metro Nashville PD by calling 615-862-8600 — a late report is better than no report at all.
1

You can still file a claim — here is why

There is no Tennessee statute that requires a police report as a prerequisite for filing an insurance claim or civil lawsuit. A police report is a piece of evidence, not a legal requirement for compensation. Many accidents — especially minor fender-benders, parking lot collisions, and incidents where police do not respond — go unreported. That does not mean your injuries or property damage are not real or compensable.

In fact, police reports are not even admissible as evidence at trial in Tennessee. Courts treat them as hearsay because the officer typically did not witness the accident. Their value is primarily during insurance negotiations, where adjusters use them as a reference. Without one, you need to build your case using other evidence — and the good news is that other forms of evidence can be just as strong or stronger.

That said, not having a police report does make your claim harder. Insurance adjusters are more skeptical of unreported accidents. The other driver has more room to dispute what happened. And without an official record, it becomes your word against theirs on fault — which matters enormously under Tennessee's comparative fault system.

2

Evidence that replaces a police report

Photographs and video are your strongest substitute. Take photos of all vehicle damage, the accident scene, road conditions, traffic signals, skid marks, and debris immediately after the accident. If you have dashcam footage, preserve it. Nashville's TDOT SmartWay cameras cover interstates and major highways — your attorney can request this footage. Check nearby businesses along corridors like Broadway, West End Avenue, and Nolensville Pike for surveillance cameras that may have captured the crash.

Medical records create a documented link between the accident and your injuries. Go to the emergency room or urgent care within 24 hours of the accident, even if you feel fine. Vanderbilt University Medical Center, TriStar Centennial Medical Center, and Saint Thomas Midtown Hospital all provide emergency care. Tell the doctor exactly what happened and where you hurt. The medical record becomes a timestamped record of your injuries tied to the accident date. Follow all prescribed treatment — gaps in care give insurers ammunition to argue your injuries are not serious.

Witness statements carry significant weight. If anyone saw the accident — other drivers, passengers, pedestrians, nearby store employees — get their full name and phone number on the scene. A written statement describing what they saw can corroborate your version of events. Cell phone records can also help establish timelines and disprove distracted driving allegations against you.

3

File a late police report if possible

A late report is always better than no report. Call Metro Nashville Police Department's non-emergency line at 615-862-8600 and explain that you were in an accident and need to file a report. For property-damage-only incidents, you may be able to file online through MNPD's reporting system. If injuries were involved, you will need to call or visit a precinct in person.

Tennessee law (TCA 55-10-107) requires a written report to the Tennessee Department of Safety within 20 days for accidents involving injury or property damage exceeding $1,500. Even if you miss the 20-day window, file anyway — a late report still creates an official record. MNPD reports typically take 48–72 hours to process before copies become available.

Be honest about the timeline. Do not claim you just had the accident if it happened days or weeks ago. Officers and insurance adjusters can see the filing date, and dishonesty will destroy your credibility. Simply explain why the report was delayed — you did not realize you were injured, the other driver convinced you not to call police, you were confused after the accident. A truthful late report is far more valuable than no report at all.

4

How the insurance process works without a police report

File your claim with the at-fault driver's insurance company (or your own if they fled or are uninsured). Provide all the evidence you have — photos, medical records, witness statements, your own detailed written account. Be specific about the date, time, location, weather conditions, and exactly how the accident happened. The more detail you provide, the harder it is for the adjuster to dismiss your claim.

Expect more pushback from the adjuster. Without a police report, insurers have more room to question whether the accident happened as you describe, to assign you a higher percentage of fault, or to offer a lowball settlement. Be prepared for this. Do not give a recorded statement without understanding your rights. Do not accept the first offer. And remember that Tennessee is an at-fault state — the at-fault driver's insurance is responsible for your damages.

If the other driver's insurer denies your claim or disputes fault, you still have options. Your own collision coverage can pay for vehicle damage (minus your deductible), and your UM/UIM coverage may apply if the other driver is uninsured. Tennessee requires UM coverage at a minimum of $25,000/$50,000 under TCA 56-7-1201 unless you rejected it in writing. You can also file a personal injury lawsuit within the 1-year statute of limitations.

5

Why comparative fault makes evidence critical

Tennessee's modified comparative fault law (TCA 29-11-103, McIntyre v. Balentine) uses a hard 50% cutoff. If you are found 49% or less at fault, your damages are reduced by your fault percentage. If you are 50% or more at fault, you get nothing. Zero. This makes fault determination the most important issue in any Tennessee car accident claim.

Without a police report, the other driver has more room to blame you. They can claim you ran the red light, changed lanes unsafely, or were speeding. Your word against theirs — and the insurance company may split fault 50/50, which under Tennessee law means you recover nothing. This is why alternative evidence matters so much. Photographs, dashcam footage, witness statements, and physical damage patterns can all prove what actually happened.

Every piece of evidence you can gather tilts the fault determination in your favor. Nashville is a busy city — between the tourist traffic downtown, the construction zones on I-440 and I-24, and the daily congestion on major arterials like Gallatin Pike and Murfreesboro Pike, accidents happen constantly. Hire a personal injury attorney who can reconstruct the accident scene, analyze damage patterns, obtain surveillance footage, and present a clear picture of fault.

6

Tennessee's 1-year deadline applies regardless

Tennessee's statute of limitations for personal injury claims is just 1 year from the date of injury (TCA 28-3-104). This is one of the shortest deadlines in the country. Having no police report does not extend this deadline, pause it, or create any exception. If you do not file a lawsuit within 1 year, your claim is permanently barred — no matter how strong your evidence is.

For property damage claims, you have a longer window — 3 years under TCA 28-3-105. But if you have both injuries and property damage from the same accident, the personal injury deadline is the one that matters most. The 1-year clock starts on the date of the accident (or the date you discovered the injury, if it was not immediately apparent).

Do not wait. The sooner you act, the more evidence is available. Surveillance footage gets overwritten. Witnesses move or forget. Medical records are most persuasive when treatment starts immediately after the accident. And your attorney needs time to investigate, build your case, and negotiate before filing a lawsuit becomes necessary.

7

Get Your Free Injury Claim Check

Not sure if you have a case without a police report? Get your free Injury Claim Check. You will answer a few questions about your accident and injuries, and we will provide a personalized report covering your potential claim value — including what evidence you need to strengthen your case — and connect you with a Nashville personal injury attorney who handles no-report claims.

Many successful personal injury cases in Tennessee are built without police reports. What matters is the quality of your evidence, the clarity of the fault picture, and how quickly you act. Start with the Injury Claim Check. It is free, confidential, and takes less time than worrying about whether you still have a case.

Tennessee Car Accident Claims at a Glance

1 Year

statute of limitations for personal injury claims in Tennessee — one of the shortest in the nation

TCA 28-3-104

50% Bar

Tennessee's comparative fault cutoff — at 50% or more fault, you recover nothing

TCA 29-11-103

~24%

of Tennessee drivers are uninsured — UM coverage is essential

Insurance Research Council

615-862-8600

Metro Nashville Police non-emergency number — call to file a late accident report

Metro Nashville Police Department

When Nashville police may not respond to your accident

Metro Nashville Police Department prioritizes calls involving injuries, hit and runs, and significant property damage. For minor fender-benders with no injuries, especially on private property like parking lots, MNPD may not dispatch an officer to the scene. They may instruct you to exchange information with the other driver and file a report later. This is frustrating but does not mean your accident does not matter. Call the non-emergency number (615-862-8600) to get instructions, and file a report as soon as you can. If the other driver asked you not to call police — a red flag — contact MNPD anyway and explain the situation.

Nashville traffic accident trends

Davidson County recorded over 26,000 traffic crashes in 2024 according to the Tennessee Department of Safety. Nashville saw 117 traffic fatalities in 2024, the highest single-year total in recent history. High-volume corridors like Murfreesboro Pike, Gallatin Pike, Nolensville Pike, and Charlotte Avenue consistently rank among the most dangerous roads in Davidson County. Nashville's rapid population growth — the metro added over 100 residents per day over the past decade — has intensified traffic congestion and crash frequency across the county.

Medical treatment after an accident in Nashville

Vanderbilt University Medical Center is a Level I trauma center and the region's top destination for serious injuries. TriStar Centennial Medical Center, Saint Thomas Midtown Hospital, and TriStar Southern Hills Medical Center also provide emergency care. For less severe injuries, visit an urgent care clinic within 24 hours. The most important thing is to go — and to tell the medical provider exactly what happened. Medical records are the single strongest piece of evidence in a car accident claim without a police report. They document your injuries, link them to the accident, and create a timeline that insurance adjusters cannot ignore.

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No Police Report FAQ — Nashville Car Accidents

Yes. A police report is not a legal requirement for filing an insurance claim in Tennessee. You can file a claim with the at-fault driver's insurer or your own insurer using other evidence such as photographs, medical records, and witness statements.

It can be. A police report provides an official record of the accident and the officer's observations. Without it, the other driver has more room to dispute what happened. Strong alternative evidence — photos, dashcam footage, medical records, witnesses — can compensate for the lack of a report.

Yes. Call MNPD's non-emergency line at 615-862-8600 to file a late report. Tennessee law (TCA 55-10-107) requires a written report to the Department of Safety within 20 days for accidents involving injury or $1,500+ in property damage. Filing late is always better than not filing at all.

Call the police anyway — or file a report as soon as possible afterward. Drivers who ask you not to call police are often hiding something: no insurance, a suspended license, an outstanding warrant, or intoxication. A police report protects you. If you already agreed not to call and are now worried, file a late report with MNPD.

The strongest evidence includes photographs of all vehicle damage and the accident scene, medical records from treatment within 24 hours, witness statements with contact information, dashcam or surveillance footage, and your own detailed written account of what happened. The more evidence you have, the stronger your claim.

Tennessee's modified comparative fault system (TCA 29-11-103) bars recovery if you are 50% or more at fault. Without a police report, the other driver has more room to argue you were at fault. This makes alternative evidence critical — without clear proof of what happened, an insurer may assign you 50% fault, which means you recover nothing.

Tennessee's statute of limitations for personal injury is 1 year from the date of injury (TCA 28-3-104). This is one of the shortest deadlines in the nation. Having no police report does not change or extend this deadline. For property damage only, the deadline is 3 years (TCA 28-3-105).

Your collision coverage and uninsured motorist (UM) coverage do not require a police report as a condition of payment. However, your insurer may be more skeptical of the claim and require additional documentation. Provide all available evidence when filing your claim.

Yes. The absence of a police report does not prevent anyone from filing a lawsuit. This is another reason to document the accident thoroughly — photographs and witness statements protect you from false claims by the other driver just as much as they support your own claim.

If you have significant injuries or the other driver disputes fault, hiring a personal injury attorney is strongly recommended. An attorney can investigate the accident, obtain surveillance footage, take witness depositions, reconstruct the scene, and build a case that compensates for the missing police report. Most Nashville personal injury attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency — you pay nothing unless you win.

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InjuryNextSteps.com provides general informational content and is not a law firm. The information on this page does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Every case is different. Contacting us does not create an attorney-client relationship. If you need legal advice, consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction. The legal information on this page references Tennessee statutes and is current as of March 2026 but laws may change. Always verify legal questions with a qualified attorney.

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