The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagecandid-bison-270

Brand new SUV hit in a parking lot — do I have a diminished value claim?

I genuinely don't even know where to start with any of this. I've never dealt with insurance beyond just paying my premium every month, so I'm basically starting from zero here.

I spent about three years saving up and finally bought myself a brand new SUV earlier this year. It's the most expensive thing I have ever owned, no joke. Took it to a family gathering last weekend, came back out, and someone had caved in the entire front quarter panel on the driver's side. No note. Nothing. Luckily a bystander caught the other car on their phone pulling away, so I have a partial plate and a description — their insurer has already accepted liability.

Here's my thing: the car has maybe 8,000 miles on it. It's basically new. Even after a 'perfect' repair, that accident is going to show up on a Carfax forever. If I try to sell or trade it in two or three years, I'm going to eat that loss, right?

I've been reading about diminished value claims and I think I'm entitled to pursue one on top of the repair costs, but I have no idea how to actually do that. Do I hire an independent appraiser? Does the other driver's insurance just... fight it? Is it even worth it for the hassle?

Also — I live in a pretty small town. The only body shops nearby look like they haven't updated their equipment since the 90s. Can I demand the repair be done somewhere farther away, like a certified shop? Will insurance cover that?

I worked so hard for this car and I feel sick about it. Any advice from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 21
    quiet-raven-382

    Former adjuster here. Diminished value is real and it's compensable in most states, but insurance companies are trained to make it feel complicated so you give up. An independent appraisal from a credentialed auto appraiser is going to carry a lot more weight than anything the carrier's own appraiser produces. It costs money upfront but it's almost always worth it on a vehicle this new. Also — on the shop question, you have the right to choose your own shop. Full stop. If they try to pressure you otherwise, push back.

    • 7
      clear-seal-822

      Diminished value claims on nearly-new vehicles are among the more winnable property damage disputes out there — the math is pretty clear when a car has low mileage and a clean history pre-accident. Whether it's worth hiring someone to fight for it depends on the numbers involved, but an initial consultation with a PI attorney who handles property damage is usually free. Not legal advice, just pointing you toward a resource that exists.

    • 6
      soft-spoken-mile-marker124

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 19
    wise-tern-755

    Don't let the adjuster lowball you on the repair AND on DV. They are going to try to get you to accept whatever number they throw out. The first offer is almost never the best offer. On the body shop question — yes, you can usually request an OEM-certified shop. Just say you want manufacturer-certified repairs and make them find one. Don't let them steer you somewhere just because it's cheapest for them.

    • 7
      bright-wolf-703

      Were you in the car when it happened, or was it unoccupied? Just making sure you're not brushing off any physical symptoms. Stress after something like this is real too — don't minimize how rattled you feel.

  • 13
    swift-hare-766

    A couple of practical things: document everything right now — photos of the damage from every angle, screenshots of your purchase records, and any communication with the other driver's insurer. Keep a paper trail of every conversation including who you spoke to and when.

    For the diminished value piece, there are independent appraisers who specialize specifically in DV calculations. Some PI attorneys also handle DV claims on a contingency basis, meaning you don't pay unless they recover something. Not legal advice, just stuff I've seen in my work — worth at least making a few calls.

  • 13
    warm-raven-421

    I know it feels awful right now, but the fact that you have liability accepted already puts you in a much better position than a lot of people on here. That's genuinely the hardest part for a lot of accident victims. You've got leverage — use it.

    • 7
      honest-rider742

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

  • 13
    candid-elk-597

    What state are you in? DV rules vary a lot — some states make it pretty straightforward and others are a real uphill battle. Also, did the bystander actually give you the footage or just describe the car? That could matter more than you think if the other driver tries to dispute anything.

  • 8
    cool-crow-719

    I went through almost the exact same thing two years ago — practically new car, someone clipped it in a lot, and I had no idea diminished value was even a thing until a friend mentioned it. You absolutely can pursue it on top of the repair claim. The other driver's insurance isn't going to volunteer to pay it, though. You'll likely need to push hard or get some outside help.

  • 7
    quiet-sparrow-906

    Short version: don't sign anything, don't accept a settlement check, and don't let them close the claim until you're fully satisfied with both the repair AND the DV question. Once you cash that check and sign a release, it's usually over.