The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
Property damagepatient-crane-912

At-fault driver's insurance totaled my truck but the shop says it's fixable — stuck in the middle

Okay so I need to talk through this because I feel like I'm getting squeezed from both sides and I don't know what to do.

Three weeks ago someone ran a red light and slammed into the front quarter of my truck. 100% their fault — there's a traffic cam that caught the whole thing. I've had this truck for almost a decade, kept it immaculate, new tires last spring, zero rust, everything worked perfectly.

The at-fault driver's insurance inspected it and just declared it a total loss. They're offering me a payout that feels low for how well I maintained the vehicle. My issue is that a body shop I actually trust looked at it and told me the damage is repairable — it's not cheap, but it's doable. Their number for doing it right (not cutting corners) is significantly higher than what the insurance company's own repair estimate says.

So now I'm stuck with a few crappy options:

  • Take the payout, lose the truck, and try to replace it in this market (good luck)
  • Keep the truck, accept a reduced payout with a salvage title slapped on it, and pay a huge amount out of pocket to actually fix it properly

Neither feels fair when I didn't do anything wrong.

My questions for anyone who's been through this: 1. Can I actually push back on their valuation, and does vehicle condition/maintenance history matter? 2. If I keep it and fix it myself, can I go after the at-fault driver for what I'm out of pocket? 3. Is there any way to fight the total loss designation itself and force them to just... pay for the real repairs?

I'm not trying to get rich here. I just don't want to eat a massive loss because someone else blew a red light.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 17
    curious-swan-733

    I went through almost this exact thing last year. The other insurance lowballed my valuation and I just accepted it like an idiot. In hindsight I wish I had pushed back harder — apparently you can hire an independent appraiser to counter their number, and if there's a big enough gap you can sometimes force appraisal arbitration depending on your state. Definitely don't just sign anything yet.

    • 9
      weary-survivor862

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 14
    steady-sparrow-028

    Their repair estimate being way lower than your trusted shop's estimate is a RED FLAG. Insurers routinely use numbers that assume cheap aftermarket parts, skipped steps, and labor rates nobody actually charges. The gap between their estimate and a real shop doing it right is basically the insurer protecting their bottom line, not yours. Document everything from your shop in writing.

    • 6
      calm-parent918

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

  • 19
    plain-swift-730

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest with you — total loss thresholds are partly financial decisions, not purely engineering ones. Once a car hits a certain percentage of its value in damage, it's cheaper for them to total it. That doesn't mean the car can't be fixed. It just means fixing it correctly isn't in their interest.

    Also, those valuation tools they use pull comps from a database that often doesn't account for actual condition. If you have receipts showing recent maintenance, new tires, any upgrades — submit all of it in writing as a formal dispute. Sometimes they'll adjust. Not always, but it happens.

  • 16
    kind-sparrow-456

    A couple of procedural things worth knowing: most states allow you to retain a totaled vehicle at a reduced payout, but you'll get a salvage title which will affect resale and sometimes insurability down the road. More importantly, your claim against the at-fault driver (or their insurer) is technically for your full damages — not just what the insurance company decides to pay you. If you have a gap between what you're receiving and your actual documented loss, that gap may still be recoverable. An attorney consult would tell you more specifically. Not legal advice, just process context.

  • 14
    keen-crow-834

    The at-fault driver's insurer owes you for your actual loss, not just whatever number their system spits out. If you can document — with real shop estimates on letterhead — that proper repair costs more than they're acknowledging, that's a legitimate basis for disputing the valuation. Whether it's worth pursuing depends on the gap and your state's rules. Talk to a PI attorney before you sign any release. Most do free consults. Not legal advice.

    • 16
      quick-stoat-101

      Don't keep it with a salvage title unless you truly love that truck and plan to drive it forever. Salvage titles tank resale value, some insurers won't fully cover salvage vehicles, and financing one later is a nightmare. If the payout feels low, fight the valuation first — get two or three written estimates from real shops and submit them formally. But the salvage route is usually the worst of both worlds.

  • 10
    plain-owl-826

    Are you doing okay physically? Sometimes people get so focused on the property side of things (totally understandable) that they brush off how they're feeling. Even a solid impact can cause soft tissue stuff that doesn't show up for days. Just making sure you're not ignoring your body in all this.

  • 19
    quiet-mole-094

    What state are you in? And did you get independent comps for what your truck is actually worth — like, looked at actual listings for comparable trucks with similar mileage and condition? Because sometimes the valuation is closer than people think once you really dig into the market. Not saying roll over, just saying make sure you're comparing apples to apples before you go to war over the number.

    • 9
      patient-passenger187

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

    • 5
      plainspoken-co-pilot506

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 10
    cool-mole-810

    Ugh this is so unfair. You did everything right — maintained it, kept it clean — and now you're the one eating the loss because someone else couldn't stop at a red light. I really hope you're able to fight this. Please don't just sign the first thing they put in front of you.

    • 9
      calm-walker587

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