The Shoulder
The Shoulder
60
Property damagequick-crane-207

Debris flew off a flatbed and totaled my car — now I'm getting pennies for it??

I genuinely don't even know where to start with this because I'm still kind of in shock that this is happening to me.

I was cruising on the interstate a few weeks back, minding my own business, when a piece of strapping or some kind of metal bracket flew off a flatbed truck ahead of me. No warning, zero time to react. It skipped off the pavement and launched straight into the front of my car. I heard this horrible bang and immediately felt the car lose power. Pulled over as fast as I could — fluids were pouring out from underneath. The engine didn't survive the tow to the shop.

The good news (I guess?): I got the trucking company's info off the side of the rig, a couple other drivers stopped and gave statements, and the company has basically admitted their load wasn't secured right. So liability isn't the fight.

The fight is the payout.

My car is older — like, almost old enough to vote — but I babied that thing. Full service records, new tires last spring, zero rust, ran perfectly. And now I'm being told its "market value" is somewhere in the low four-figures. That's it. That's what I get for something that was genuinely my only way to get to work and back.

I have no savings cushion right now. I picked up extra hours specifically to get ahead, and now that whole plan is torched because I don't have a car. The amount they're quoting me won't even get me into something reliable.

Can I push back on this number? Do I have any options beyond just taking what they're offering? Has anyone actually won this fight or am I just venting into the void?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 12
    kind-crane-419

    Oh man, I went through almost the exact same thing — older car, well-maintained, and the insurance offer was embarrassing. What I didn't know at first is that you can actually challenge their valuation. I went and pulled listings for comparable vehicles in my area (same year, similar mileage, same general condition) and sent them over in writing. They came back with a better number pretty quickly after that. It's not magic but it works. Don't just accept the first offer — they're counting on you to.

  • 19
    bright-fox-009

    The valuation they gave you was almost certainly generated by some automated tool that spits out the lowest defensible number. It doesn't account for the fact that your car was in exceptional condition relative to others with the same age and mileage. Document everything — service records, receipts, photos of the interior and exterior before the accident if you have them. The more paper trail you have showing your car was above average, the harder it is for them to lowball you.

  • 18
    mellow-stoat-749

    I worked in claims for years and I'll tell you straight: the first total loss offer is almost never the final offer. Adjusters are evaluated on how quickly they close files and how low the payouts are. When a claimant pushes back with documented evidence — comparable listings, maintenance records, anything that shows the vehicle's actual condition — it changes the math. You're not being rude or difficult by negotiating. It's a completely normal part of the process and we expected it.

  • 9
    patient-stoat-205

    One thing worth knowing: in most states, if the at-fault party's negligence caused your loss, you may be able to claim more than just the vehicle value. Rental costs, towing fees, and other out-of-pocket losses tied to the accident can sometimes be included in a demand. Also — and this matters — since a trucking company is involved, there may be federal regulations about load securement that were violated. That's a different conversation than a typical fender-bender. Not legal advice, just stuff worth looking into.

  • 8
    bright-swift-328

    When a commercial vehicle is involved and the company has already admitted fault, the situation has more leverage than a typical two-car accident. An attorney who handles commercial trucking claims can sometimes recover losses that go beyond what you'd get just negotiating a total loss payout — things like the actual cost to restore your transportation situation, not just the book value of the car. Many PI attorneys take these cases on contingency so there's no upfront cost. Worth at least a free consult. Not legal advice.

  • 7
    clever-crow-309

    Are you doing okay physically? Sometimes people get so wrapped up in the car and money stuff that they don't realize they have soreness or tension from the impact until days later. Adrenaline is wild — it masks a lot. If you felt any jolt or impact in your body at the time, please get checked out even if you feel mostly fine. Some things don't show up right away.

    • 1
      weary-neighbor641

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

    • 5
      thankful-late-shift717

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 20
    clever-bison-124

    Gather comps. Right now. Go on every used car listing site you can find, search your region for vehicles matching your car's year, make, trim, and similar mileage, and screenshot at least 6-8 listings. Then write a short letter to the adjuster saying the market evidence doesn't support their valuation and attach everything. That alone can move the number. If they still won't budge, get a lawyer involved — the trucking company admitted fault, which is already most of the battle.

  • 7
    steady-crane-619

    This whole situation is so unfair and I'm sorry you're dealing with it. You did everything right — maintained the car, drove safely — and some company's carelessness just blew up your whole situation. I hope you're able to find people in your corner who can help you get a fair outcome. You deserve more than a lowball check and a shrug.

    • 2
      kind-traveler555

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