The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
plain-owl-724

Car is only 6 months old and already has a repair history — am I just screwed on resale value?

So here's my situation. I bought a brand new SUV back in the spring — literally had under 3,000 miles on it when some guy ran a red light and clipped my rear quarter panel pretty hard. His insurance accepted full fault, no dispute there, and they paid to have it fixed at a certified body shop. The repair came out to just over $4,000.

Here's what's eating at me: that car now has a repair record on Carfax forever. Doesn't matter how good the body work looks. The second I try to trade it in or sell it privately, any buyer is going to see that history and lowball me — or just walk.

I did some digging and found out there's something called a diminished value claim, where you can go after the at-fault party's insurance for the difference in what your car is worth now vs. what it would've been worth with a clean history. So I filed one.

Their adjuster called me pretty fast, asked for my title, the repair invoice, and a couple photos of the finished work. That was basically it. No mention of comparable sales, no independent appraisal, nothing like that.

A few days later they came back with a number that felt... really low. Like suspiciously low. I don't even know how they calculated it — they didn't show their work at all.

Has anyone been through this? Did they just make up a number hoping you'd take it? Is there a way to actually push back with real evidence, or do I need someone in my corner to fight this for me? I feel like I'm negotiating against people who do this all day and I have no idea what I'm doing. 😤

12replies

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12 replies

  • 14
    plain-sparrow-105

    Not legal advice, but DV claims are absolutely legitimate and insurers know it. The low initial offer is standard practice — they're betting you don't know your rights or won't bother pushing. If your car is newer and low-mileage, your actual diminished value could be meaningfully higher than what they quoted. Consulting with a PI attorney who handles property damage claims (many do free consultations) could help you understand what you're actually leaving on the table.

    • 5
      steady-survivor515

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

  • 12
    wise-elk-940

    Not my area at all, but I just want to say — were you physically okay after the collision? Sometimes people get so caught up in the car stuff (which is totally valid!) that they push through aches and pains without getting properly checked out. Soft tissue stuff can show up weeks later. Just making sure you're taking care of yourself too, not just the vehicle.

  • 11
    bright-seal-917

    Yes, they absolutely made up a low number hoping you'd take it and go away. Same thing happened to me. My car was barely four months old when someone rear-ended me at a stoplight, and the first DV offer they threw out was almost insulting. I pushed back with a third-party appraisal I paid like $300 for and ended up getting significantly more. Don't just accept their first number — it's basically a lowball opening bid.

    • 19
      kind-vole-730

      That whole 'just send us the title and repair bill' routine is a red flag. They're not trying to figure out what you're actually owed — they're trying to close the claim as cheaply as possible. The fact that they didn't ask for comparables or sales data means they're using an internal formula that is almost always designed to undervalue the loss. Get your own independent diminished value appraisal before you respond to anything.

    • 10
      brave-newt-253

      I used to work claims, so let me be real with you. There's a widely-used internal methodology called the '17c formula' that a lot of carriers lean on for DV calculations. It's old, it's widely criticized, and it almost always produces lower numbers than a real market-based appraisal would. When they only asked for basic documents, that's probably what they used. You have every right to dispute it and submit your own appraisal as a counter. A lot of people don't know that, so they just cash the check.

    • 13
      wise-seal-186

      A few practical things worth knowing: first, diminished value claims are handled differently by state — some states are friendlier about them than others, so it's worth looking up your state's rules quickly. Second, a certified independent appraisal from someone who specializes in DV is really your best leverage here. Third, if you send a written counter with documented evidence of your car's pre-loss market value and post-repair comparable sales, they have to actually respond to it. Paper trails matter a lot in these negotiations.

    • 19
      brave-newt-087

      The good news is you're asking the right questions before accepting anything. A lot of people don't even know DV claims exist and just take the repair check and move on, leaving real money on the table. The fact that you caught this early and are pushing back already puts you ahead of where most people end up in this situation.

    • 8
      steady-driver472

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 7
    bright-swan-541

    What state are you in? That actually matters quite a bit here — some states make DV claims easier to pursue than others, and a few have specific rules about how they have to be calculated. Also, did you get the car repaired at a dealership-certified shop or an independent shop? That can affect the appraisal too.

  • 5
    brave-owl-055

    Get a DV appraisal. Period. You can find specialists online who do them for a few hundred bucks and will give you a professional report with real comps. That report becomes your counter-offer. Don't negotiate off their number — make them negotiate off yours.

    • 0
      honest-survivor269

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.