The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagebrave-kestrel-819

At-fault driver's insurance low-balled my total loss — can I actually push back?

So my car got rear-ended pretty badly at a red light about six weeks ago. The other driver was 100% at fault — there's a police report, witnesses, the whole thing. Their insurance accepted liability pretty quickly, which I thought meant things would go smoothly. Spoiler: they did not.

They came back and said my car is a total loss. Fine, I figured the payout would at least put me close to what I'd need to replace it with something comparable. But the number they gave me feels way off. Like, I could barely get a high-mileage version of the same make with sketchy history for what they're offering. My car had new tires, fresh brakes, a recent timing chain job — I have every receipt. I take maintenance seriously. None of that seems to matter to them.

I've been doing some digging and it sounds like insurers pull comps from listings that include cars with accident histories, old fleet vehicles, stuff that's just not equivalent. Meanwhile I'm supposed to replace a well-maintained car with... that?

On top of it, they're only covering my rental through the end of next week. I use my car for work — I haul tools and equipment and I genuinely cannot just grab any random compact off the lot. I need something reliable and capable.

Has anyone actually had luck disputing a total loss valuation? Like, did sending in your own comps or maintenance records actually move the needle? I feel like I'm negotiating against someone who does this every single day and I'm just one stressed person trying not to get steamrolled.

Any advice, real talk, appreciated.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 20
    silent-lynx-008

    I went through almost exactly this two years ago. The first number they gave me was a joke — I literally found three comparable listings within 50 miles that were all several thousand higher. I emailed those comps directly to the adjuster with a short note saying I believed their valuation didn't reflect actual market conditions in my area. They came back with a revised offer within a few days. Not perfect, but meaningfully better. It's worth the effort, seriously.

    • 8
      calm-parent229

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

  • 12
    silent-vole-003

    A couple of practical things: First, get your own independent appraisal if you can — some states actually allow you to invoke an appraisal clause that forces both sides to bring in neutral appraisers. Second, look up your state's department of insurance — some have specific rules about what makes a valid comparable for total loss purposes. Knowing the rules in your state gives you actual leverage when you respond to them in writing.

  • 11
    tidy-swan-930

    Were you injured in the collision at all? Even if you feel mostly okay, some things — soft tissue stuff especially — can take weeks to fully show up. Just making sure you're not so focused on the car situation that you're ignoring how your body's doing. The car is stressful, I get it, but don't skip follow-up care if you have any lingering soreness.

    • 6
      tired-dreamer188

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 9
    clear-mole-314

    The comp listings they use are often pulled from a third-party tool that can skew low, and adjusters know most people just accept the first number without question. That's not an accident. Push back every single time, in writing, and make them justify each comp they used. Ask specifically whether any of those comps had prior accidents or were former fleet/rental units — because if they're using those to value a clean-title well-maintained car, that's not apples to apples.

    • 13
      mellow-fox-776

      Former adjuster here. The valuation tools we used absolutely included listings that weren't truly equivalent — high-mileage, damage history, former rentals mixed in. When a claimant sent in their own comps with clean titles and similar condition, we were supposed to account for that. A lot of adjusters won't revisit unless you make them. Also, maintenance receipts can factor in as a condition adjustment, but only if you document it clearly and ask specifically for it to be considered. Put everything in an email so it's on record.

    • 18
      silent-badger-835

      Not legal advice, but total loss disputes are actually one of the more common things PI attorneys get asked about even when there's no injury involved. A lot of attorneys will at least take a quick call to tell you whether your state has any statutory protections around total loss valuations. Worth a free consult just to know your options before you accept anything.

    • 9
      curious-rider165

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 8
    mellow-mole-122

    Send them a written counter with your own comps — same make, similar mileage, clean title, within your region — and list out the maintenance you've done with receipt totals. Keep it factual, not emotional. Give them a deadline to respond (something like 5 business days). If they still lowball you, tell them you're filing a complaint with your state insurance commissioner. That last part gets attention fast.

  • 7
    swift-newt-637

    This sounds so exhausting, I'm sorry you're dealing with it on top of everything else. It already feels unfair that someone else caused this and now you're the one spending weekends researching comps and chasing adjusters. Please don't let them pressure you into accepting something just because you're tired — you deserve to actually be made whole here.

    • 0
      quiet-passenger160

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

    • 3
      weathered-co-pilot794

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.