Bear in mind it is not entirely her choice to go down the insurance route, you can make a claim against her insurers.
Reported experience suggests many such simple claims - a few quid for some bike bits - are paid without a great deal of fuss.
The insurance company may not even contact their insured before paying.
That happened to a mate of mine - he only found out about a paid claim for a minor supermarket car park bump when his renewal arrived a few months later.
Yeah, I understand that it's my choice as to whether to make a claim or not. I didn't bother pointing that out on the phone when she talked about herself 'deciding to go down the insurance route' as I was very keen to be reasonable and not sound threatening. If it turns out the bike can be fixed for just a few quid and I don't have any injuries that will keep me off work then I'd sooner not make a big deal out of it. One thing I'm not 100% on though, and please forgive my naivety here, when you and others refer to an insurance company paying out without their (at fault) client's knowledge, how would that work? Am I right in thinking it would be a case of the injured party enlisting a PI lawyer, or contacting British Cycling or similar if a member, and they would be able to trace the driver's insurance details via the car registration number and would deal with them direct? Seems weird but I guess in cases where it's small amounts it's cheaper for the insurance to just cough up than pay their own legal costs. In that case would the settlement be agreed by the injured party's legal team and the insurer, with no input from the injured party nor the at-fault driver? Presumably based on whatever repair bills and/or doctor's report info the injured party supplied to their lawyer?
But do report to the police over the weekend and I'd text her to say you've done so so she is aware as they'll contact her probably. I wouldn't read anything into her reaction, shock and upset makes people react oddly
Yeah, I contacted them on Friday evening. The chap was very polite and helpful. I had rung her prior to explain that I needed to contact them in case I wasn't able to go in to work next week or in case she had discovered damage to her car and wanted to make a claim of her own. She seemed surprised but compliant. I asked if she had reported it to her insurance or the police and she said she hadn't. She said she was happy for me to give them her number but they didn't want it when I offered it.
Or if the range of motion is restricted, just go straight there over the weekend
Motion very much restricted and I'm in a fair amount of pain. Can't really bend or lift anything. I'm not able to drive just yet and my wife can't drive so have decided to give it til Monday when I figure I will hopefully be safe to steer by then, or else I can get a friend to give me a lift. I'm pretty sure it's just bruising and/or straining to muscles and possibly tendons.
The woman has a legal requirement to report an accident involving an injury to the law, and it will be a condition of her insurance to inform the company of an accident whether she is to blame or not.
I'm pretty sure she hasn't done that. I only have her landline so can't send a quick text. I'll mention it when I speak to her again next week. Although she might have heard from the police anyway by then, but I'm not sure they'll contact her in relation to my incident report. I wasn't looking to get her in trouble and they said they didn't need her phone number.
FYI the claim came to over 500 with damage to bike and gear, so not huge but not chickenfeed either.
Glad you got it sorted

I can't see my damage coming to more than £60-80 for a new helmet, saddle bag bracket and rear hanger, unless
Halfords discover anything I've missed. Not sure what a new carbon steerer costs if that's gone. Was your payout for a new bike or replacement bits?