The Shoulder
The Shoulder
54
Insurancedaring-tern-844

Adjuster comes tomorrow — do I even need to be there when they inspect?

So I got rear-ended pretty hard at a red light about a week ago and the other driver's insurance has already scheduled someone to come look at my car. The damage is pretty bad — trunk won't latch, rear bumper is hanging half off, both tail lights are cracked, and there's a visible crumple in the quarter panel that goes all the way up toward the rear door.

I've been doing some reading and honestly I'm starting to wonder if this thing is just going to get totaled. The car isn't brand new but I only bought it two years ago and I still owe a decent chunk on the loan. That part is stressing me out maybe even more than the car itself.

A few questions swirling in my head:

  • Should I be present when the adjuster does the inspection, or does it not matter?
  • Is there anything I should point out or document before they get there?
  • If they do total it, how do they come up with the value they offer? Is it negotiable?
  • I have a gap in my neck and shoulders that started two days after the crash — does the property damage claim and the injury stuff get handled completely separately?

I know I'm probably overthinking this but I've never dealt with anything like this before and the whole process feels weirdly fast. Like they're rushing to wrap up the car side before I even know how I'm feeling physically. Is that normal or should I be slowing this down somehow?

Any advice from people who've been through it would be huge right now.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 14
    gentle-newt-220

    Yes, be there. When I had my car inspected after a bad collision, I walked around with the adjuster and pointed out damage he literally walked right past. They're not necessarily trying to cheat you, but they're moving fast and looking at a lot of cars. Your eyes on it too matters.

    • 2
      steady-driver791

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 8
    tidy-crane-795

    Former adjuster here — the speed is very intentional. Getting the property damage settled quickly is a standard tactic because once you sign off on that check, some people mistakenly think everything is closed. It's not — injury claims are separate — but the psychological effect of 'resolving' one piece makes people feel like the whole thing is done. Don't let that pressure you on the injury side at all. Take your time on medical.

    • 10
      calm-driver387

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 8
    daring-badger-862

    That rushed feeling you're describing? Trust it. They want the car dealt with before you realize your neck pain is actually something. Absolutely do NOT sign any kind of full release just to get the car handled faster. Read every single thing they put in front of you.

    • 5
      quiet-rider895

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 11
    sharp-finch-311

    To answer your specific questions: yes, property damage and bodily injury are handled as completely separate claims, usually by different adjusters within the same company. On the total-loss valuation — they use market comps for similar vehicles in your area, but that number is absolutely negotiable. Pull your own comps from listings online (same make, model, year, mileage, trim) before they give you a number so you have something to push back with. And if you owe more than the car is worth, your gap coverage — if you have it — should cover the difference.

    • 8
      curious-otter-851

      Not legal advice, but what you said about feeling rushed is worth paying attention to. Resolving the car quickly is fine — you need transportation. But if you're having any physical symptoms at all, don't let anyone bundle your injury claim into an early settlement. Those are two very different conversations and they don't have to happen on the same timeline. Might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand what you're dealing with before anything gets signed.

  • 10
    silent-beaver-668

    Please don't ignore the neck and shoulder stuff even if it feels minor right now. Soft tissue injuries from rear-end crashes can take days or even a couple weeks to fully declare themselves. Get seen by a doctor and make sure everything is documented with the actual mechanism — 'rear-ended at a stop' — so there's no question later about where it came from.

    • 10
      calm-survivor425

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 4
    careful-raven-886

    Take photos of everything before they arrive. Every angle, every piece of damage, the interior if there's anything affected. Do it today. Once that car leaves on a flatbed you may never see it again and those photos are your record.

    • 2
      soft-spoken-offramp325

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 3
    curious-kestrel-106

    At least you're asking these questions before anything is signed — a lot of people don't figure this stuff out until after they've already accepted the first offer. You're already ahead of where most people are at this stage.

    • 5
      plainspoken-backseat754

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.