The Shoulder
The Shoulder
67
Property damagecalm-mole-795

Airbags went off, front end is a mess — will insurance call it totaled?

So I was in a pretty bad collision about a week ago — got T-boned at an intersection and the impact was enough to set off both the side curtain airbags AND the driver's airbag. I walked away shaken but physically okay, which I'm grateful for.

The damage to the car is… a lot. The whole front quarter panel on the driver's side is crunched, the hood is buckled, one headlight assembly is basically hanging, and there's obvious frame distortion around the wheel well. I had the car inspected at a shop I trust and the tech mentioned the structural rails look okay from what he could see, but he said the airbag deployment alone adds a ton to the repair estimate because replacing all those modules, sensors, and the steering column components is expensive.

I've had this car for about three years, kept it in great shape, and it has relatively low miles for its age. I honestly don't know what the actual market value is right now vs. what repairs would cost.

Insurance hasn't made a call yet — their appraiser is supposedly coming out early next week. I'm nervous they're going to low-ball me on the value if they DO total it, or equally nervous they'll try to repair it and the car will never be quite right structurally.

Has anyone been through this? How do they actually decide when something crosses the total-loss threshold? And is there anything I should do before the appraiser shows up to protect myself? Do I need to be there in person?

I feel like I'm flying blind here and would really appreciate anyone who's gone through something similar.

9replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

9 replies

  • 17
    careful-marmot-417

    I went through almost this exact situation last year. Multiple airbags deployed in my car after a bad side-impact, and it ended up being totaled even though the car looked drivable from certain angles. The airbag replacement cost alone was massive, and once you add in the labor, sensors, and anything structural, the math usually tips toward total loss pretty fast. Hang tight — the appraiser visit will tell you a lot.

    • 16
      curious-badger-130

      Speaking from experience on the other side of the desk: when multiple airbags deploy, adjusters almost always know the repair estimate is going to spike hard. Airbag modules, clockspring, seatbelt pretensioners, the whole control unit — it adds up shockingly fast. Whether it officially crosses into total-loss territory depends on your state's threshold (some states use a percentage of actual cash value, others are more flexible), but multi-bag deployments combined with structural panel damage? I'd say odds lean toward total.

      One thing I'd strongly suggest: do your own research on comparable vehicles in your area before the appraiser visits. Pull listings from several sources. If they total it and lowball the ACV, you have the right to negotiate, and showing up with real market data makes that conversation a lot easier.

  • 11
    clear-lynx-975

    Please don't just accept the first number they give you if they total it out. Adjusters work off valuation tools that don't always reflect real-world market prices, and they're not going to go out of their way to find you the highest comparable. Document EVERYTHING about the condition of your car — service records, recent upgrades, even the fact that you kept it clean. Every little thing can support a higher valuation.

  • 19
    bold-crow-361

    A few practical things worth knowing: most states define a total loss as occurring when the repair cost hits a certain percentage of the car's actual cash value (often somewhere between 70–100% depending on where you live). With airbag deployment, that bar gets cleared more often than people expect.

    Also — you are NOT required to accept the first settlement offer on a total loss. You can counter, provide your own comps, and even hire an independent appraiser if you think the gap is big enough. Not legal advice, just process stuff I see come up constantly.

    • 10
      patient-stoat-618

      Just want to gently flag — you said you walked away physically okay, but please make sure you've actually seen a doctor and not just assumed you're fine. Whiplash, soft tissue injuries, even concussion symptoms can take days to fully surface after adrenaline wears off. Get checked out and make sure anything they find is documented, because it matters beyond just the car.

  • 11
    steady-fox-740

    Yes, be there when the appraiser comes if you can. Walk them around the car yourself, point out everything, don't leave it to chance. And honestly, with curtain airbags AND the driver bag deployed plus structural panel damage? I'd be genuinely surprised if this isn't totaled. Prepare yourself mentally for that outcome and start researching replacement options now so you're not scrambling.

    • 5
      level-road-soul972

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

  • 8
    bright-elk-386

    Ugh, this is so stressful and I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The car stuff is complicated enough but it sounds like it was a really scary crash too. Hope you're taking care of yourself emotionally, not just figuring out the logistics. Wishing you a smooth resolution 💙

  • 19
    daring-crow-389

    Quick question — did you file through your own insurance or the at-fault party's? That actually matters quite a bit for how the process plays out and how much leverage you have. Also, do you have gap coverage or anything like that on the vehicle? Changes the equation depending on what you owe vs. what they value it at.