The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagebright-newt-196

Car totaled 3 weeks after buying it, insurance 'settlement' is a joke — what can she actually do?

Posting this for my sister because she's too stressed to even think straight right now.

She saved up for almost two years to buy her car outright — used, but in great shape, and she paid cash for it. Three weeks later some guy blows a red light and absolutely destroys it. Police came, the other driver got cited, totally his fault, open and shut.

Here's the gut punch: his liability coverage is offering her an amount that doesn't even come close to what she paid for the car. Like, we're talking a gap of several thousand dollars. She has no car, no way to get to work reliably, and that job is the only thing keeping her afloat right now.

She did have basic coverage on her own policy but nothing fancy — no gap insurance, no rental reimbursement add-on. The rental she's been driving is already costing her out of pocket and that clock is ticking.

Questions we're trying to figure out:

  • Can she dispute the other insurance company's valuation of the car? Like, is that number even negotiable?
  • Is going after the at-fault driver directly (small claims or a lawsuit) actually realistic, or is it mostly a headache for nothing?
  • Does the fact that he got cited at the scene help her case at all?

She's not trying to get rich, she literally just wants to be able to buy something comparable so she can keep her job. Any experience with this? We feel completely lost.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 19
    curious-newt-670

    Oh man, this hit close to home. Almost the exact same thing happened to me a couple years back — paid cash for a car, someone rear-ended me badly a month later, and the other insurance lowballed me hard. What I didn't know at first is that their initial offer is almost always a starting point, not a final number. I found comparable cars listed for sale in my area, printed out the listings, and sent them to the adjuster as evidence that their valuation was off. It took a few weeks of back and forth but they did come up a meaningful amount. Tell your sister not to just accept the first number without fighting it.

    • 10
      kind-traveler886

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

  • 11
    patient-dove-688

    The other driver's insurance company is NOT on your sister's side. Full stop. Their job is to close her claim as cheaply as possible and move on. That 'offer' they gave her? It's probably based on some algorithm that lowballs on purpose, hoping she just signs and goes away. She should not accept anything or sign any release until she's at least talked to someone who knows what these valuations are actually supposed to look like.

    • 26
      humble-stoat-967

      A few things worth knowing about her options:

      1. Disputing the valuation — yes, totally doable. She can request the methodology the insurance company used and counter it with market comparables. Some states also have appraisal dispute processes built into policies. 2. Going after the at-fault driver directly — if his policy limits aren't enough to cover her actual damages, she could potentially pursue him personally, but collecting on a judgment is a whole separate challenge. 3. Rental costs — those may actually be recoverable as part of her claim against the at-fault driver's liability coverage, not just a sunk cost for her.

      She should document every single expense from the moment of the accident forward.

  • 22
    wise-marten-266

    I spent years working claims for a major carrier so let me give you the inside view. Adjusters pull vehicle valuations from tools that often undervalue cars in certain markets or condition categories. The number they give you is a starting position. If your sister can document the car's condition — recent maintenance records, photos before the accident, receipts for any upgrades — she has legitimate grounds to challenge the comp. Also, the citation the other driver received is absolutely relevant and makes her claim much cleaner. She has leverage here, she just needs to use it.

    • 9
      steady-commuter692

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

  • 12
    calm-owl-218

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking — a police citation against the other driver is strong evidence of liability, which is actually the part that's hardest to establish in these cases. If liability is clear, the fight becomes about damages, and that includes the fair market value of the vehicle and potentially consequential damages like transportation costs while she's without a car. Whether it's worth pursuing beyond the insurance negotiation depends on a lot of factors, but she should at least have a free consultation with a PI attorney before signing anything. Most won't charge unless they recover something.

  • 18
    steady-dove-200

    Is your sister doing okay physically? I know this post is about the money side but sometimes the stress of dealing with all this masks symptoms people brush off after an accident. Even lower-speed collisions can cause soft tissue stuff that shows up days or weeks later. Just making sure someone's checking on her beyond the financial chaos.

  • 11
    patient-badger-681

    Three things she needs to do right now: (1) Stop talking to the other driver's insurance without documentation of every single conversation. (2) Pull up listings for comparable cars in her area to counter their valuation — this is not hard and it works. (3) Don't sign any release. Once she signs, it's over. Everything else can be figured out, but signing early is the one mistake you can't undo.

    • 3
      careful-driver681

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 17
    swift-marten-493

    This is so unfair and I'm sorry she's going through it. She did everything right — saved her money, bought a car, was just living her life — and now she's being penalized for someone else's mistake. I really hope she gets what she deserves out of this. Rooting for her.

  • 8
    clear-newt-217

    Quick question — does she know what the at-fault driver's actual policy limits are? Because if he only had minimum liability coverage, there may be a ceiling on what his insurance will ever pay out regardless of how strong her case is. That changes the math on whether pursuing anything beyond the insurance negotiation is worth the time and stress. Worth finding out before deciding on next steps.

    • 0
      weathered-mile-marker879

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.