The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damageclear-fox-987

At-fault driver's insurance totaled my car but the payout won't cover what I owe — what now?

So I'm dealing with a situation that's stressing me out more than the actual crash at this point.

About six weeks ago I got rear-ended on my way to work. I was completely stopped at a construction zone, and the guy behind me just wasn't paying attention. Totaled my SUV. His fault, 100% — there were two witnesses and a police report confirms it.

His insurance finally came back with a settlement offer this week and it's several thousand dollars short of what I still owe on my loan. Like, not even close. I've been making payments on this thing for two years and now I'm supposed to just eat that gap? I don't have gap insurance, which I know — trust me, I know. I learned that lesson the hard way.

On top of the money issue, I need a vehicle to get to work. My job isn't remote, there's no public transit where I live, and I've already been bumming rides off coworkers for over a month. That goodwill is running out fast.

A few questions I keep turning over in my head:

  • Can I sue the at-fault driver personally to cover the difference between the insurance payout and my loan balance?
  • Is that even worth pursuing, or does it just drag on forever and cost more than it's worth?
  • Does it matter whether he actually has the personal assets to cover it?

I've talked to one attorney who said I might have options but didn't go into detail. Just trying to understand if anyone has actually gone down this road and what happened. I feel like I'm getting squeezed from every direction and I just want to do the right thing without making my situation worse.

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11 replies

  • 7
    gentle-dove-129

    I went through almost this exact situation a couple years back. The gap between the insurance offer and my loan balance felt impossible. I ended up negotiating with the insurance company first — they actually bumped the offer a bit when I pushed back with my own comparable listings from the area. Didn't fully close the gap but it helped. Definitely document every comparable vehicle you can find online and send it to the adjuster in writing.

  • 12
    bright-hare-640

    Not legal advice, but to answer your question directly: yes, you can generally sue an at-fault driver for damages that exceed their insurance payout. The more practical question is whether it's worth it. If the other driver doesn't have significant personal assets or income, winning a judgment doesn't automatically mean you collect. An attorney can sometimes do a quick asset check before you decide to pursue it. Worth at least a free consultation to find out.

    • 21
      careful-kestrel-406

      Worked in claims for years — the valuation tools insurance companies use often pull low comps or undervalue options and trim levels. Ask them specifically what source they used for the ACV (actual cash value) and request the full comp report. You have the right to see it. If your vehicle had low mileage, recent tires, new brakes, anything — push to have that factored in. Sometimes the gap shrinks significantly just by doing that.

    • 2
      gentle-commuter897

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 9
    warm-wolf-069

    The initial offer from his insurance is almost never their best offer. They're counting on you being exhausted and desperate enough to just take it. Get your own independent appraisal of the vehicle's pre-accident value and compare it to actual comparable listings — not what they claim. If there's a meaningful difference, dispute it in writing and ask for their methodology. Adjusters hate that.

  • 20
    cool-hare-805

    A couple of things worth knowing: most states allow you to file a small claims or civil suit against an at-fault driver independently of the insurance claim. The tricky part is that if you accept the insurance settlement, you typically sign a release that closes out the claim. So don't sign anything until you've fully decided your path. Once you sign, that's usually it.

    • 1
      quiet-wanderer487

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 19
    steady-bison-334

    Bluntly: dispute the offer before you do anything else. You've got nothing to lose by rejecting it and asking for a re-evaluation. Hire an independent appraiser if you have to — it usually costs a few hundred bucks and can shift the number meaningfully. Suing is a longer road and it's only worth it if the adjuster won't budge AND the other driver has something to actually collect from.

  • 8
    quiet-lynx-362

    I'm so sorry you're going through this on top of everything else. The fact that you've been figuring out rides for a month while dealing with loan stress AND a job that depends on having a car — that's a lot for one person. Please don't just accept their first number because you're worn down. You deserve to be made whole here.

    • 8
      grounded-road-soul183

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 19
    warm-lynx-972

    Quick question — did you look into whether the at-fault driver had adequate liability limits on his policy? If his coverage cap is lower than your total damages, that changes the math on suing him personally. Also, what did the one attorney you consulted actually specialize in? A PI attorney who handles auto cases specifically will give you a very different answer than a general practice lawyer.