The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
Property damagekind-newt-110

At-fault driver's insurance totaled my car but their offer won't replace it — what now?

So I got hit about three weeks ago. Guy ran a red light and smacked my passenger side pretty hard. Police came, he got the ticket, not me. His insurance accepted liability pretty quickly which honestly surprised me, but now I'm in valuation hell.

My car was a higher trim level — not the base model, had a bunch of factory upgrades and pretty low mileage for its age. Their adjuster came back with a total loss offer that made my jaw drop. When I requested the comparable vehicle report they used to get to that number, every single comp they listed was either a base trim or had like 40,000+ more miles on it than mine did. That's not comparable. That's just... finding the cheapest version of my car they could.

I tried pushing back and sent them three listings I found myself from dealers within a reasonable distance. They rejected two of them immediately, said something about not accepting certain dealership sources. The one they didn't reject outright was still significantly higher than what they offered me.

Here's what's frustrating: I'm not asking for a brand new car. I know that's not how this works. But I am saying I should be able to replace my car with something in roughly the same condition and trim level, right? That's the whole point of "making you whole."

Does anyone have experience fighting a total loss valuation? Did you hire someone? Go through your own insurance and let them fight it? I don't even know if getting a lawyer involved makes sense for a property damage dispute or if that's overkill. Any advice appreciated — I feel like I'm arguing with a wall.

11replies

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

11 replies

  • 24
    bright-otter-739

    I used to do total loss valuations. Honest truth? The software these companies use pulls comps automatically and adjusters don't always scrutinize them closely. When you dispute with your own solid comps, a lot of times the adjuster just kicks it up the chain and someone will actually look at trim levels and condition more carefully. Your best leverage is showing them in writing — with links or screenshots — that equivalent vehicles are selling for more. Be specific: same trim, similar mileage, within a reasonable geographic radius. If their system genuinely can't find valid comps locally, they're supposed to widen the search, not just grab the cheapest distant listings.

  • 20
    mellow-raven-774

    Not legal advice, but property damage disputes can sometimes be worth consulting a PI attorney about even if it's just a free call. Some attorneys handle total loss disputes, and in certain states if an insurer is acting in bad faith on valuation, there are additional remedies. At minimum, an attorney can tell you quickly whether it's worth pursuing or whether negotiating directly is your better path. Most offer free consults so there's not much to lose by asking.

    • 9
      tired-neighbor723

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 15
    sharp-newt-320

    They're doing exactly what they're trained to do. The first offer is almost never the real offer — it's a starting point designed to see if you'll just take it and go away. The comp manipulation (wrong trim, high mileage, obscure markets) is a classic move. Don't accept anything until you've actually priced out what it would cost you to replace your specific vehicle today.

    • 16
      spry-fox-278

      A couple of things worth knowing: in most states, the at-fault party's insurer owes you "actual cash value" — which is supposed to reflect what you'd actually have to pay to replace the vehicle with a substantially similar one. If the comps they're using aren't actually similar (wrong trim, way higher miles), that's a legitimate dispute. You can also check whether your state's department of insurance has rules about how total loss valuations have to be conducted — some states have pretty specific requirements. Filing a complaint with the DOI doesn't cost anything and sometimes gets insurers to move faster.

  • 15
    mellow-otter-045

    What trim level exactly and what mileage are we talking? I ask because sometimes people remember their car as being in better shape or a higher spec than it actually was on paper — not accusing you, just saying the details matter a lot here. Also, did you have any prior damage on the vehicle? That affects ACV and the insurer will factor it in.

  • 15
    calm-wolf-274

    The fact that liability was accepted quickly is actually a big deal — a lot of people have to fight that battle first. You're already past the hardest part in some ways. The valuation fight is frustrating but it's a known process with real leverage points. You've got this.

  • 14
    humble-marmot-363

    Went through almost this exact thing last year. Their comps were garbage — base models with way more miles. What finally moved the needle for me was finding private-party listings (think Facebook Marketplace, AutoTrader, etc.) for my same trim level and mileage range, screenshotting them with timestamps, and submitting them formally in writing. I also sent a letter citing my state's fair market value standard. It took two rounds of back-and-forth but they bumped the offer. Don't just call — put everything in writing.

    • 10
      swift-elk-018

      Go through your own insurance. Seriously. If you have collision coverage, let your insurer fight theirs. Yes, you might pay your deductible upfront, but your insurer will subrogate (recover it from the at-fault carrier) and you'll get it back. Your insurer is motivated to get the right number because they want their money back too. Dealing directly with the at-fault insurer when you're already frustrated is a losing game for most people.

    • 3
      quiet-rider966

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

  • 12
    clever-raven-873

    I hope you're doing okay physically — people sometimes get so caught up in the property side that they forget to check themselves out medically even after what seems like a routine collision. If you had any stiffness, soreness, or headaches in the days after, please get it documented with a doctor. Not trying to alarm you, just seen too many people dismiss symptoms that ended up mattering later.