The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damageclear-hare-207

Appraisal says total loss, insurer says fix it — my car's been hostage at the shop for 3 months

I'm losing my mind over this and honestly don't know what to do next, so I'm hoping someone here has been through something similar.

Back in late winter I got rear-ended pretty hard on the highway. Other driver was clearly at fault — police report backs that up. I decided to run everything through my own collision coverage just to keep things moving faster. Big mistake maybe, I don't know.

The body shop did a full teardown and came back saying repairs were going to run way more than what my insurer was willing to authorize. Like, not even close. The shop told me I had the right to invoke the appraisal process, so I did — hired an independent appraiser out of my own pocket, which wasn't cheap. Took about two months to get a result.

Here's where it gets wild: the appraisal came back and essentially deemed the car a total loss. I figured okay, finally — we have a resolution. Nope.

My insurer is now telling the shop to go ahead and fix it anyway, ignoring the appraisal outcome. The shop is pushing back saying the appraisal award is binding. Meanwhile my car is just sitting there, storage fees are piling up daily, and I've been paying out of pocket for a rental for weeks because my insurer's rental coverage ran out.

I'm stuck in the middle of a fight between the shop and the insurance company and nobody seems to care that I'm the one getting crushed here.

  • Is the appraisal award actually legally binding or not?
  • Who's responsible for those storage fees?
  • Can I do anything to force a resolution without hiring a lawyer?

Any advice or shared experience is really appreciated. I feel completely powerless right now.

17replies

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17 replies

  • 21
    sharp-raven-408

    Oh man, I went through something almost identical last year. The appraisal process sounds like a lifeline when they offer it to you, but nobody warns you that the insurer might just... ignore the result and act like it's a suggestion. I ended up having to get an attorney involved before anything actually moved. I really wish I'd done it sooner instead of spending two months going back and forth on my own.

    • 5
      steady-optimist126

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

    • 3
      plainspoken-co-pilot192

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

  • 14
    gentle-owl-574

    This is a classic delay-and-exhaust tactic. They run out the clock knowing you're bleeding money on a rental and storage fees, hoping you'll cave and accept whatever lowball settlement they finally dangle. Do NOT let them pressure you into accepting a repair that the appraisal already ruled out. Document every single phone call — date, time, who you talked to, what they said. That paper trail matters more than people realize.

  • 15
    clear-tern-421

    I used to work on the carrier side and I'll be straight with you — what you're describing shouldn't be happening. When both parties agree to the appraisal process and an umpire issues an award, that result is supposed to be binding on the insurer. The fact that they're now telling the shop to repair anyway is genuinely unusual and, depending on your state's insurance regulations, could actually constitute bad faith. You should be filing a complaint with your state's Department of Insurance today — not as a last resort, as a first step. It creates a paper trail and sometimes magically speeds things up on the insurer's end.

    • 4
      patient-survivor582

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

  • 15
    quiet-swan-016

    A few practical things worth knowing:

    1. File a DOI complaint immediately. Your state insurance commissioner's office takes binding appraisal disputes seriously, and a formal complaint can move things faster than you'd expect. 2. Get everything in writing. If your insurer is telling the shop to proceed with repairs, ask them to send that instruction in writing. Same with the shop's position on the binding nature of the award. 3. Storage fees — this is a gray area but there's often an argument that the insurer's delay caused them to accrue, which could make those fees their problem. An attorney can push on that.

    Not telling you what to do, just — the DOI complaint is free and easy, do it now.

    • 7
      plainspoken-backseat493

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 14
    humble-finch-116

    Not legal advice, but this situation has 'bad faith' written all over it if your state recognizes that cause of action. Insurers generally cannot unilaterally ignore a binding appraisal award — that's the whole point of the process. The storage fees and out-of-pocket rental costs could potentially be recoverable as consequential damages if you pursue this the right way. I'd strongly suggest at least a free consult with a PI or insurance bad-faith attorney in your state before you make any more decisions here.

    • 6
      thankful-offramp229

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 7
    clever-mole-170

    I know this post is about the car stuff but — are you doing okay physically? Sometimes people get so focused on the property damage fight that they don't get properly checked out, or they downplay symptoms because the logistics are overwhelming. Just making sure you're not ignoring your own health in the middle of all this chaos.

    • 16
      clear-otter-366

      This sounds so exhausting and stressful, I'm really sorry you're dealing with it. It's not okay that you're the one stuck paying for everything while they argue. Please don't let them grind you down into just accepting whatever they offer — you clearly did everything right by invoking the appraisal process.

    • 0
      tired-survivor460

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

    • 3
      mellow-sidewalk319

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

  • 16
    quiet-wren-788

    Three things. One: stop calling and start sending emails so everything is documented. Two: file the DOI complaint today, it's free. Three: consult with an attorney — most PI lawyers do free consults and bad faith cases sometimes work on contingency. You've already paid out of pocket for the appraiser, you've paid weeks of rental, you're getting nowhere. The DIY approach has hit its ceiling here.

  • 7
    quiet-mole-278

    Genuine question — did you actually read the appraisal clause in your policy before invoking it? Some policies have language that limits what the appraisal award can actually compel the insurer to do, especially around total loss determinations versus repair authorization. I'm not saying you're wrong, just wondering if there's a specific clause the insurer is leaning on to justify ignoring the result. Might be worth having someone read the actual policy language.

    • 8
      steady-survivor531

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?