The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagecandid-raven-510

Brand new car totaled after a hit-and-run — how is this even possible??

I'm still kind of in shock writing this so bear with me.

About three weeks ago someone sideswiped my car in a parking garage and just... drove off. I had literally owned the car for maybe six weeks. It still had that new-car smell. I managed to grab a partial plate number from the security camera footage the garage gave me, so I passed that along to my insurance company, but since nobody was hurt the responding officer told me an official accident report wasn't something they could file — basically told me to handle it through insurance.

So I did. And now my insurer is telling me the car is a total loss.

I genuinely don't understand how that's possible. The damage looked bad to me but I'm not a body shop expert. The car is practically fresh off the lot — low miles, no prior damage, nothing. How does a car that new get written off so fast? Is this just the cheapest option for them?

I asked for the actual repair estimate vs. the ACV breakdown and the adjuster kind of just talked in circles. I have collision coverage so at least I'm covered, but now I'm worried about gap coverage, whether I'll get what the car is actually worth, and whether I have any room to push back on their valuation.

Has anyone been through something like this — especially on a nearly-new vehicle? Did you just accept what they offered or did you fight it? I feel like I'm about to get lowballed and I don't even know the rules of the game yet.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 17
    gentle-grouse-667

    Are you doing okay physically? Sometimes in the shock of dealing with the car stuff people push through stress and don't realize how it's affecting them. Even a low-speed sideswipe can rattle you. Just check in with yourself.

  • 11
    gentle-wren-086

    This happened to me with a car I'd had for under four months. The thing nobody tells you is that insurance companies calculate total loss based on repair cost vs. their assessed market value — and if repairs cross a certain threshold (sometimes as low as 70-75% of what they say the car is worth), they just total it. It doesn't matter how new it is. I was floored too. Definitely ask them to show you exactly how they calculated ACV because mine had errors I was able to dispute.

  • 10
    humble-swift-928

    Worked in claims for years. Total loss thresholds vary by state and by insurer — some companies set them pretty aggressively because it's administratively cleaner than managing a long repair. On a newer car the ACV should be relatively close to what you paid, but the software tools adjusters use to generate valuations sometimes pull comps that aren't truly comparable. You have every right to request the valuation report and dispute individual line items. Most people don't know that, so most people don't do it.

    • 19
      clever-swift-319

      What does your policy actually say about how ACV is calculated? And do you have new-car replacement coverage or just standard collision? Those are two totally different things and a lot of people don't realize which one they have until exactly this moment.

    • 8
      level-offramp528

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 10
    cool-lynx-349

    A few things worth doing right now: (1) get the full written valuation from your insurer, not just a verbal summary; (2) check whether you have GAP coverage — if you're still financing this car, GAP can cover the difference between the ACV payout and what you still owe; (3) document everything, including every conversation with your adjuster. If the hit-and-run driver is eventually identified through that plate info, there may be an uninsured motorist claim angle worth exploring too.

    • 3
      careful-wanderer816

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

  • 9
    mellow-raven-361

    Do NOT just accept the first offer. Adjusters are trained to close files fast and cheap. Pull your own comps — look at actual dealer listings for the same make, model, trim, and mileage in your area. If their number doesn't match what you'd actually have to pay to replace the car, put that in writing and push back. They count on people being too overwhelmed to challenge it.

    • 3
      curious-optimist122

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 8
    gentle-raven-187

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but if the ACV comes out fair and you have GAP, you could walk away without being upside-down on the loan and get into a replacement vehicle without losing too much ground. The key is making sure that valuation is actually accurate — which it sounds like you're already questioning, which is the right instinct.

    • 1
      level-late-shift182

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 7
    clever-newt-567

    Three things: get the valuation report, pull dealer comps yourself, and if they're more than a few hundred off on a car this new, tell them in writing you're disputing it. Don't just call — email so you have a paper trail. If they stonewall you, a PI attorney consult is usually free and they can tell you fast whether it's worth pushing further.

    • 5
      hopeful-commuter917

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

    • 3
      grounded-sidewalk551

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