The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
Property damagebrave-badger-534

Diminished value claim — do I actually need to hire my own appraiser or will the at-fault insurer lowball me?

So my car got rear-ended at a stoplight about six weeks ago by someone whose insurance has already accepted 100% liability and paid out for all my repairs. The body shop did solid work and the car looks fine, but now I'm worried about what this does to my resale value down the road.

I started looking into diminished value claims and honestly it's a rabbit hole. From what I can tell, I'm entitled to claim the difference between what my car was worth before the accident vs. what it's worth now with a collision history on the Carfax — even after perfect repairs. That makes total sense to me. A repaired car just isn't worth the same as one with a clean history.

Here's my dilemma: I called the at-fault driver's insurance to ask about filing a DV claim and the adjuster was weirdly casual about it, like "sure, just send us something in writing and we'll review it." That felt... too easy? I've read that insurers use their own formula (some 17c method?) that almost always spits out a laughably low number.

So my questions for anyone who's been through this:

1. Do I need to hire an independent DV appraiser to counter whatever number they come up with, or is that overkill? 2. If so, how do I find a legit one — is there a certification I should look for? 3. Is it even worth fighting for DV on a car that's a few years old with some miles on it, or does the value drop not matter as much?

I'm not trying to be greedy — I just don't want to get handed some nonsense lowball number and feel like I had no idea what I was doing. Any experience here would be really appreciated.

12replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

12 replies

  • 13
    cool-raven-930

    I went through almost this exact thing last year. The insurer sent me a DV offer that was genuinely embarrassing — like they ran it through some formula and handed me a number that had nothing to do with actual market reality. I pushed back with an independent appraisal I paid for out of pocket and ended up getting significantly more. Absolutely worth it in my case. The appraiser cost me a few hundred bucks but the difference in the final number was way more than that.

    • 5
      humble-newt-406

      Quick question — do you know if your state even allows third-party DV claims? Some states are pretty restrictive about this and it varies a lot. Worth looking that up before you spend money on an appraisal, just to make sure you're not hitting a wall.

  • 9
    calm-bison-852

    That adjuster being "casual" about it is a red flag to me. They're not being nice — they're betting you don't know what your claim is actually worth. The 17c formula they use is basically designed to minimize payouts. Don't take whatever first number they throw at you. Get your own appraisal from someone who isn't on their payroll.

  • 8
    cool-bison-637

    Okay, I used to work claims so let me be straight with you. When an adjuster says "just send us something in writing," they mean send us whatever you've got so we can respond with our own number — which will almost always be lower than fair market reality. The internal tools we used were calibrated conservatively, let's put it that way. An independent appraiser who specializes in DV is not overkill. It's the only way to have a real counter-position.

    • 14
      mellow-tern-125

      The good news here is that you're asking BEFORE you accept anything. Most people either don't know DV is a thing or they find out after they've already signed a release. You're ahead of the curve. Take your time, get the appraisal, and negotiate from a position of actual knowledge.

    • 1
      thankful-late-shift719

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 12
    silent-lynx-462

    On finding a legit appraiser — look for someone who specifically advertises "diminished value appraisals" and has experience testifying or writing reports for disputes. Some are certified through automotive appraisal organizations, though honestly the quality varies. Ask them upfront if their report is formatted to hold up if you need to escalate to a demand letter or small claims. That's the real test of whether they know what they're doing.

    • 1
      soft-spoken-road-soul509

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 14
    tidy-crow-724

    Not legal advice, but: DV claims are very real and you're right to pursue it. Whether it's worth fighting depends on your car's pre-accident value and how much the collision history actually dents resale in your market. An independent appraisal gives you a defensible number to negotiate from — without it you're just accepting whatever they say. If they lowball you hard and won't budge, small claims court is an option in many states without needing to hire an attorney.

    • 0
      grounded-road-soul478

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 5
    wise-seal-115

    Short answer: yes, get your own appraiser. Don't walk into a negotiation with no data. You wouldn't let them pick your body shop, don't let them pick your DV number either.

    • 0
      steady-driver386

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