The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagewise-hare-874

Can I stall the total loss process? Don't need a replacement car right away

So my SUV got hit pretty hard from the side last week — other driver ran a red light and basically crunched my whole passenger door and quarter panel. The body shop I took it to gave me a preliminary look and the guy basically said 'yeah, this is probably going to be a total loss' given how old the vehicle is. I'm waiting on the official estimate but I'm bracing for it.

Here's the thing — my situation is a little different from most people I think. My partner and I are actually planning to move overseas in about two months for work, so we were already planning to sell or donate the vehicle before we left. We genuinely don't need a replacement car. In fact, getting a payout sooner rather than later would almost be too soon — we're in the middle of figuring out a lot of logistics and a lump sum right now would honestly be a headache timing-wise.

So my question is: does anyone know if you can slow-walk the total loss process with the at-fault driver's insurance? Like, can I just... not respond quickly? Or ask them to hold off? I don't want to do anything that hurts my claim, but I also don't want to feel pressured into signing off on a payout before I'm ready.

Also — is there any risk to waiting? Like will the insurance company use delays against me somehow, or does the clock only matter for them?

Any experience with this would be really helpful. I'm not in a rush, I just want to make sure going slow doesn't accidentally cost me something.

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10 replies

  • 9
    hearty-mole-669

    Not legal advice, but in most states there's no statute of limitations issue with simply taking time to respond to a settlement offer on a property damage claim — the clock for legal action is much longer and hasn't started ticking in a meaningful way yet. What I'd flag is that you want to make sure any injury side of the claim (if you have one) isn't being lumped in with the vehicle payout. Sometimes insurers try to bundle things. Keep those separate and don't sign any broad release just to settle the car.

    • 6
      patient-swan-454

      Were you injured at all in the crash, or is this purely about the vehicle? That changes things a lot. If it's just property damage and no injuries, yeah you can probably drag your feet a little. But if there's any physical stuff going on — even stuff that seems minor now — you want to be a lot more strategic about timing.

  • 10
    quick-sparrow-371

    Short answer: you can slow this down without any real risk to yourself. Just don't sign or verbally agree to anything until you're ready. Simple as that.

  • 9
    silent-kestrel-860

    Whatever you do, don't let them pressure you with lines like 'this offer expires in X days' — that's a tactic. Their first offer on a total loss is almost always on the low end. If you have time to wait, USE it. Research your vehicle's actual market value independently before even discussing numbers with them.

    • 20
      patient-fox-899

      Former adjuster here. Internally, total loss files get flagged if they sit too long, and supervisors start asking questions — but that pressure is entirely on the company's side, not yours. You're not obligated to accept or respond on their schedule. The one thing I'd say: make sure the vehicle is stored somewhere reasonable (not racking up huge tow yard fees that complicate things later). Other than that, take your time. They'll wait.

    • 4
      curious-rider550

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 24
    gentle-badger-922

    Generally speaking, the pressure to settle quickly benefits the insurance company, not you. There's usually no hard deadline forcing you to accept a total loss offer — they may have internal timelines, but that's their problem. Just be careful: if they're also paying for a rental car as part of the claim, some policies cap how long they'll cover that, so delaying could cost you rental reimbursement if that applies. Since you don't need a replacement, that probably doesn't matter, but worth knowing. Also get anything they offer in writing before agreeing to anything.

    • 17
      sharp-lynx-578

      This is such a stressful situation even without the added layer of an international move — I hope everything goes smoothly for you! It sounds like you're thinking it through carefully, which is honestly the best thing you can do. Don't let them rush you.

  • 7
    bold-crow-501

    I was in a somewhat similar spot — my car got totaled and I already had a new one on order, so I wasn't in a hurry either. Honestly I just didn't return the adjuster's calls super quickly and asked for a few extra days 'to review the offer' each time they pushed. Nobody penalized me for it. It dragged out a few extra weeks without any drama. Just don't ignore them completely or they might escalate.

    • 0
      kind-dreamer381

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