The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagequick-swift-078

At-fault insurer has ghosted me for months on my totaled car — anyone else dealt with this?

I genuinely don't know what to do anymore and I'm starting to feel like I'm losing my mind.

Back in the spring, the other driver's insurance accepted liability and declared my car a total loss pretty quickly. Great, right? Except since then I've been in some kind of bureaucratic purgatory. The property damage adjuster responds to maybe one out of every six emails, and when he does respond it's vague non-answers like "we're working on it." I still don't have clear instructions on what I need to do to hand over the title and actually get my payout.

I've called the main line probably a dozen times. Half the time I get bounced between departments. The two times I actually reached my adjuster directly, he was dismissive and condescending — like I was bothering him by asking about my own claim.

To complicate things, I also have a separate injury claim open with the same company. They actually sent me a settlement offer on that one, but when I went to accept it online there was a release document that looked like it would wipe out all my claims with them — including the property damage that's worth way more than the injury payout. I stopped cold and didn't sign.

I filed a complaint with my state's insurance regulatory office. After I did that, the insurer responded to the regulator with some information that flatly contradicted things I have in writing. The regulatory office basically said they don't referee factual disputes, which felt like a punch to the gut.

I now have multiple pending payments sitting in limbo and no clear path forward. Has anyone actually broken through a wall like this? Do I need a lawyer just to get them to communicate with me?

15replies

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15 replies

  • 15
    cool-sparrow-591

    Oh man, this is giving me flashbacks. I had almost the exact same thing happen — property claim dragging on forever while the injury side kept nudging me to settle. I made the mistake of signing the injury release without reading it carefully and it DID reference the broader claim. I had to fight to get it clarified before anything was finalized. Do NOT sign anything until you understand exactly what scope it covers. You're smart to have paused.

  • 17
    quiet-badger-486

    This is a classic delay tactic. They know the property side is the bigger number, so they dangle the smaller injury payment hoping you'll sign a broad release out of frustration or desperation. Then they can argue the whole thing is settled. The adjuster being unresponsive isn't incompetence — it's a strategy. Document every single unanswered email. Timestamps matter later.

    • 18
      kind-badger-930

      Not legal advice, but what you're describing — sustained non-communication, a release that may bundle separate claims, and a regulator response they allegedly misrepresented — is exactly the kind of situation where a free consult with a PI attorney is worth your time. Many will look at bad faith insurance handling, not just the underlying accident. You might be surprised what leverage just a letter from an attorney can create. Not saying sue anybody tomorrow, just saying you have more options than it feels like right now.

  • 7
    candid-crane-354

    I used to work on the carrier side and I'll be honest with you — when a file sits this long without movement, it's usually one of two things: the adjuster is severely overloaded and your file keeps getting bumped, or there's some internal dispute about the reserve amount that nobody's telling you about. Either way, escalating to a supervisor in writing (email, so there's a paper trail) and explicitly using the phrase 'bad faith delay' sometimes shakes things loose. Companies don't love seeing that language floating around in documented correspondence.

    • 6
      kind-walker612

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

  • 12
    brave-marmot-385

    A few things worth knowing: most states have regulations that require insurers to acknowledge claims and respond within specific timeframes — usually somewhere in the 10-to-30-day range depending on the state. If they're blowing past those windows, that's potentially a regulatory violation, not just bad customer service. Your complaint to the insurance department was the right instinct. If they gave the regulator inaccurate information, document that discrepancy carefully — screenshots, emails, whatever you have. That kind of thing can matter a lot if this escalates.

    • 10
      gentle-driver786

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

    • 5
      restless-overpass473

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

  • 18
    clever-heron-148

    Stop calling. Every single communication from this point forward should be email or certified mail — you need a paper trail that can't be disputed. When you write, be specific: 'I am ready to surrender the title and finalize the property claim. Please provide written instructions by [specific date].' Give them a deadline. Vague requests get ignored. Deadlines with documentation get responses.

    • 3
      honest-parent258

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 9
    quick-swan-513

    I just want to check in on you as a person because this kind of prolonged stress is genuinely not good for recovery — physical or otherwise. The anxiety of an unresolved financial situation after an accident can actually slow healing. I know that sounds abstract when you're dealing with all this paperwork, but please make sure you're not putting your own medical follow-ups on the back burner while you fight this battle. You matter more than the claim.

  • 12
    cool-seal-925

    I don't doubt your frustration, but I'm curious — did you have an attorney involved at any point, or have you been handling this entirely on your own? And when the regulator said they 'don't get involved in factual disputes,' did they give you any guidance on next steps, or was it just a dead end? Wondering if there's a gap somewhere in how the complaint was framed.

    • 6
      weathered-sidewalk379

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

    • 7
      steady-walker210

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 14
    sharp-otter-351

    Honestly the fact that they haven't gotten you to sign anything yet is a blessing in disguise. You still have full leverage on both claims. A lot of people in your position would have already signed that release out of exhaustion and lost their negotiating position entirely. You're frustrated, which is completely valid, but you're actually in a better spot than you might feel right now.