The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagequick-fox-046

Anyone actually sued in small claims over diminished value? Insurer lowballed me bad

So my car got hit while it was parked — total stranger plowed into it in a grocery store lot, left a note at least, and their liability coverage accepted fault pretty quickly. Repairs took forever but they're finally done and the body work looks fine honestly.

Now I'm fighting for diminished value. I got an independent appraisal done and the number came back way higher than what the at-fault driver's insurer is offering me. Like, not even close. The appraiser basically told me this company is notorious for throwing out a low number and then stonewalling — they don't counter, they just say "that's our offer" and go quiet.

The appraiser suggested I sue the driver directly in small claims for the gap between their offer and what the appraisal says I'm owed. Apparently a lot of these insurers will suddenly find room to negotiate once a court date is on the calendar, because defending small claims isn't worth their time.

Has anyone actually gone this route? I'm nervous about showing up to court even if it's "small" claims — I've never done anything like that. Did the insurer settle before you ever had to appear? Did the driver freak out when they got served? Did it actually work?

My car isn't ancient — it's only a couple years old with pretty low mileage, so the DV feels real and significant to me. I don't want to just roll over and accept pennies. Any experience or advice appreciated.

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12 replies

  • 10
    careful-elk-632

    I went through almost this exact thing last year. Insurer made a laughable first offer on my DV claim and then literally stopped responding to emails. I filed in small claims against the at-fault driver — served them, got a court date — and within like three weeks the insurer reached out and offered something much closer to my appraisal number. Never actually sat in front of a judge. The filing itself seemed to be the magic move.

    • 24
      swift-swift-416

      Former adjuster here. Those 'final offer' lines are mostly theater, especially on DV. What's actually happening is the adjuster doesn't have authority to go higher without supervisor sign-off, and nobody wants to escalate a file if they think you'll just go away. Filing in small claims forces the file to get flagged, a supervisor looks at it, and suddenly there's more flexibility. I saw it happen constantly. The drivers usually don't even fully understand what's going on — their insurer handles everything — but yeah, getting served can rattle people into calling their insurer and demanding it get resolved.

  • 9
    gentle-stoat-587

    That 'here's our number, take it or leave it' routine is a deliberate strategy. They're betting you'll just accept it because most people don't want the hassle of court. Don't let them outlast you. The moment they sense you're actually serious — like, you've filed paperwork serious — the math changes for them. Keep all your documentation airtight: the appraisal, repair invoices, photos, every email.

    • 11
      wise-dove-020

      File. Seriously, just file. The fee is like $30-100 depending on your state. You've already done the hard part by getting the independent appraisal — that's your evidence. Small claims is designed for regular people, no lawyer required. Worst case you show up and explain it to a judge. Best case, and honestly the most common case from what I've heard, they settle before it ever gets that far.

  • 7
    brave-marten-173

    A couple of practical things worth knowing: small claims limits vary by state, so double-check that your gap amount falls under your state's cap before you file. Also, when you sue the driver, their insurer is almost certainly obligated to defend them under the policy — which means you're effectively dragging the insurer into it even though they're not the named defendant. That's partly why it tends to shake things loose. Keep your independent appraisal as your anchor number and be ready to present it clearly if it does go to a hearing.

    • 7
      weathered-overpass273

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 16
    hearty-fox-275

    Not legal advice, but diminished value claims are genuinely worth pursuing — courts take them seriously when you have a solid independent appraisal backing you up. The small claims route is a legitimate path a lot of people use specifically because it's lower-cost and faster than formal litigation. If your gap is significant, the filing fee is usually a pretty small investment. Might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your state's specific rules before you file.

  • 17
    patient-newt-073

    Ugh, this sounds so stressful especially after already dealing with the whole repair nightmare. I really hope you get what you're owed — it's YOUR car and its resale value actually matters. Don't let them just walk all over you.

    • 0
      hopeful-parent741

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 6
    cool-fox-994

    Quick question — did the appraiser you hired have any stake in the outcome, like do they charge more if you recover more? I'm not saying your claim isn't valid, DV is real, just want to make sure the number you're anchoring to is solid and defensible if a judge asks about it. An appraisal from someone with no contingency interest tends to carry more weight.

    • 4
      restless-overpass734

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

    • 5
      steady-survivor464

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.