The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagedaring-dove-710

At-fault insurer wants my totaled truck released before giving me a value — should I hold off?

So my truck got hit pretty hard a few weeks ago — other driver ran a red light, their insurance accepted liability no problem. Now their adjuster keeps calling me saying I need to authorize the tow yard to release my truck to them before they'll tell me what they think it's worth. That feels completely backwards to me?

I pushed back and asked for the valuation first and she basically said 'that's not how we do it' and then dropped the hint that storage fees would stop being covered if I dragged my feet. Felt like a pressure tactic honestly.

I did some digging and talked to someone at the tow yard and they told me I have every right to hold onto authorization until I get a number in writing. They also said once the insurer has physical possession, it gets a lot harder to dispute whatever lowball offer they come up with.

I've got a PI attorney handling my injury claim but he told me straight up that property damage isn't really his lane, so I'm kind of navigating this part alone.

Has anyone dealt with this? Do I really have leverage here as long as the truck is still sitting at the yard? I don't want to rack up a huge storage bill I'm somehow on the hook for, but I also don't want to hand over my only bargaining chip before I even know what number they're going to throw at me.

Any advice from people who've been through this would be huge. 🙏

14replies

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14 replies

  • 11
    clever-fox-945

    The fact that they accepted liability already is actually a really good position to be in. A lot of people are fighting just to get that far. You have more leverage than you think — use it! Get your number, stand firm, and don't let the pressure make you move faster than is good for you.

    • 10
      tired-dreamer248

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 8
    hearty-marten-377

    Not my area at all, but I just want to say — you're already dealing with recovery from the injury side of this and now you've got all this stress on top of it. Stress genuinely slows healing. Don't let them rush you into a decision just because they're making you feel like the clock is running out. Take the time you need.

    • 9
      honest-passenger730

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 22
    brave-bison-134

    From a process standpoint — the property damage and the personal injury are technically two separate claims, which is probably why your PI attorney stepped back. It might be worth a quick consult with someone who specifically handles property damage disputes, or even just calling your own insurer (if you have collision coverage) and asking them to step in and handle it. That's literally what subrogation is for, and suddenly it's their problem to fight, not yours.

    • 4
      quiet-traveler524

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

    • 2
      plainspoken-co-pilot200

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 21
    steady-beaver-600

    I used to work on the insurance side and honestly? The adjuster's job is to close files efficiently. 'That's not how we do it' just means that's not how they prefer to do it — there's no law saying they can't give you a valuation first. The storage fee thing is real in the sense that they can stop voluntarily covering it, but you may be able to argue they're responsible for those fees since their insured caused the loss. I'd get the valuation in writing before you release the vehicle. Full stop.

    • 20
      careful-crow-437

      Quick question — did they actually put the storage fee threat in writing or was it just verbal? Because there's a big difference. If it was just something the adjuster said on the phone, that's very different from an official letter. I'd document every conversation with dates and times either way.

    • 7
      plainspoken-overpass390

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 11
    daring-marten-427

    The storage fee threat is a classic pressure move — don't let it spook you. They use it to get you to act fast so you don't have time to research your vehicle's actual market value. Get 3-5 comparable listings in your area, screenshot them, and have your own number ready before you sign off on anything. Knowledge is literally your only weapon here.

    • 20
      cool-hare-512

      Don't release it. Simple as that. The second they have the truck, your negotiating position drops to basically nothing. Let the storage fees tick up a little if you have to — that cost is on them since their driver caused this. Get the offer in writing first, compare it to actual market comps, then negotiate before you sign off.

  • 12
    spry-seal-883

    Oh man, I went through almost the exact same thing last year. I released my car before I got a number and immediately regretted it. The offer they came back with was way lower than what comparable vehicles were selling for in my area. Once they had the car I felt like I had zero leverage. If I could do it over I would have held off until I had something in writing.

    • 4
      weathered-co-pilot571

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.