The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagequick-fox-970

Diminished value offer feels insultingly low — is this normal or am I getting played?

So the other driver was found 100% at fault, my car got pretty badly damaged — we're talking a significant repair bill — and now the insurance company is offering me a diminished value (DV) payout that feels like a rounding error compared to what actually happened to my car's worth.

My car was in great shape before the crash. Clean history, well-maintained, relatively low miles for its age, higher trim level. Pre-accident the thing was worth a solid amount on the market. Now it's got a repair history attached to it forever, and the DV offer they sent over is... laughable. Like, I could barely take my family out to a nice dinner on what they're offering.

I asked them to explain their methodology and they sent over some dense formula-looking document that honestly raised more questions than it answered. It seems like they're using some kind of base percentage approach that completely ignores how the used car market actually works — like how buyers react specifically to structural or significant body repairs on the CarFax.

Has anyone actually pushed back on a DV offer and gotten somewhere? I keep reading that the first offer is almost always low, but I don't know if paying for an independent appraisal is worth it, or if there's a simpler way to challenge their math.

I've got a lot going on right now — little kids, job stuff, just a lot — so I'm trying to figure out if fighting this is genuinely worth my bandwidth or if I should just take it and move on. Gut says no, but I'm tired and could use some perspective from people who've actually been through this.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 12
    tidy-kestrel-420

    Oh man, I went through almost this exact thing last year. First DV offer was a joke. I pushed back, got an independent appraisal from a local certified appraiser, and ultimately ended up with significantly more. The appraiser cost me a few hundred bucks but it was absolutely worth it. Do NOT just accept that first number.

    • 15
      daring-kestrel-687

      I'm so sorry you're dealing with this on top of everything else you've got going on. It's exhausting to have to fight for what's fair when you're already stretched thin. Please don't feel like you have to just accept a lowball offer because you're tired — you deserve to be made whole here.

    • 6
      honest-dreamer385

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 19
    silent-seal-459

    That "formula document" they sent you? It's designed to look official and overwhelming so you'll just give up. Insurers count on claimants not knowing that DV is negotiable. The formula they use almost always undervalues the actual market impact, especially on nicer trim vehicles where buyers are picky. Don't let the paperwork intimidate you.

    • 10
      steady-survivor891

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 10
    sharp-crow-535

    Worked in claims for years and I'll be straight with you — the initial DV calculation is run through software that spits out a number based on generic depreciation schedules, not actual buyer behavior in your specific market. If your car is a desirable model in good condition, the real-world stigma of accident history hits harder than their formula reflects. An independent appraisal letter gives you actual leverage to reopen the negotiation. It's one of the few tools that genuinely moves adjusters.

    • 16
      hearty-heron-966

      A couple things worth knowing: most states allow you to invoke the appraisal clause in the policy when there's a dispute over value — even for DV claims in some cases. Also, keep every email, the methodology document they sent, and any comps you can pull from listing sites showing what similar vehicles sell for with and without accident history. Paper trail matters a lot if this escalates. Not legal advice, just process stuff.

  • 21
    quiet-badger-889

    DV claims are one of the most under-recovered areas in personal injury and property damage. A lot of people don't even know they're entitled to it, and insurers know that. If the gap between their offer and a reasonable DV estimate is substantial, it may be worth a free consult with a PI attorney — many handle DV disputes and can tell you quickly if the numbers justify pursuing it. Not legal advice, just saying it's worth one conversation before you sign anything.

    • 9
      careful-survivor411

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 14
    bold-beaver-988

    Not my lane on the car stuff, but — if anyone in the vehicle was in the crash too, please don't let the property damage process distract you from making sure everyone got properly checked out medically. Adrenaline masks a lot in the days after. Just a reminder since you mentioned little ones.

    • 8
      careful-optimist479

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 20
    gentle-elk-675

    Get an independent appraisal. Full stop. You can find certified auto appraisers who specialize specifically in diminished value — Google "DV appraisal" plus your state. Their report will give you an actual dollar figure backed by real comps and market data. Bring that back to the adjuster. That's the move.

  • 10
    sharp-swan-758

    Quick question — did the repairs go through the at-fault driver's insurance or yours? And was the damage structural/frame-related or mostly cosmetic panels? Those two things make a big difference in how strong your DV argument actually is. Frame damage on a Carfax tanks resale way harder than a replaced bumper cover, so the details really matter here.