The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagewise-badger-053

GF's car totaled in crash I was driving — did the appraiser lowball her?

So this whole situation has been stressing me out because I feel responsible even though the accident wasn't my fault.

Some background: I borrowed my girlfriend's car a few weeks ago to run some errands. Some guy blew through a stop sign and hit me pretty hard on the driver's side. Cops came, report filed, other driver was clearly at fault — no dispute there.

I dealt with the other driver's insurance for my own injuries and honestly feel okay about what I settled for on my end. But my girlfriend's car is a totally different story.

Her car got declared a total loss, and the insurance appraiser came back with a number that feels way too low for what the car was actually worth. She bought it maybe 18 months ago, kept it in great shape, and it was genuinely her only way to get to work. The payout they're offering wouldn't even cover a comparable replacement — not even close.

I've been doing some digging and it sounds like appraisers for the at-fault driver's insurance have every incentive to come in low. Like, that's just... their job, kind of?

So my questions are: 1. Is this her claim to pursue independently, even though I was the driver? 2. Can she push back on the appraisal, and how? 3. Should she get her own attorney separate from anything I did?

I feel awful that she's stuck in this situation because of something that happened in her car while I was driving it. Any advice from people who've been through something similar would really help. We're kind of figuring this out on the fly.

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15 replies

  • 22
    tidy-finch-085

    Not legal advice, but this comes up a lot — driver and owner are different parties with different claims. She hasn't waived anything just because you settled yours. If the gap between their offer and actual market value is significant, it may well be worth her time to at least talk to an attorney. Some will handle property damage as part of a broader case. The fact that she's without transportation can also factor into a rental or loss-of-use claim, which people often forget to push for.

  • 19
    quick-tern-520

    Just to clarify the legal structure here: the vehicle claim belongs to the registered owner, which is your girlfriend. Her claim and your injury claim are two separate matters even though they stem from the same accident. She can retain her own attorney without it affecting anything you already settled. If she thinks she was lowballed, a PI attorney can often help with property damage disputes too — not just injuries. Many offer free consultations so it doesn't hurt to ask.

    • 3
      kind-driver382

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 14
    cool-crow-457

    Ugh, this sounds so stressful, especially because you feel guilty even though it wasn't your fault. Please remind yourself — and your girlfriend — that the person who ran the stop sign caused all of this. You didn't. I hope she's able to get a fair amount for her car. She deserves that.

    • 5
      weary-survivor253

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

    • 8
      level-co-pilot153

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 13
    genuine-dove-293

    How far off is the offer from what she thinks the car is worth? Like are we talking a few hundred dollars or something more significant? That context matters a lot for whether it makes sense to get an attorney involved or just handle the negotiation herself directly.

    • 5
      steady-passenger272

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 11
    cool-elk-060

    Just want to check — are you doing okay physically? Side-impact collisions can do a lot of soft tissue damage that doesn't show up immediately. Make sure you're not dismissing anything just because the adrenaline has worn off. Your girlfriend's car situation sounds stressful but don't let it distract you from following up on your own health.

    • 12
      quiet-dove-232

      Three things she should do right now: (1) Get an independent written appraisal. (2) Send a formal written counter-offer to the insurance company with her own comps attached. (3) Talk to a PI lawyer — most do free consults and can tell her in 20 minutes if it's worth pursuing. Don't just accept the low number because it feels easier. It almost always goes up when you push back with documentation.

  • 8
    mellow-tern-711

    Yes, it's absolutely her claim — the car is her property so she's the one with standing to fight the total loss payout. I went through something similar where my brother was driving my truck when someone rear-ended him. I had to handle the vehicle side completely separately from whatever he dealt with for his injuries. Don't let the insurance company blur those lines.

    • 0
      quiet-optimist315

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

  • 5
    bold-swan-948

    That appraiser works for the other driver's insurance company. Full stop. Their entire job is to protect their employer's bottom line, not to give your girlfriend a fair number. She should absolutely get an independent appraisal from a local dealer or a third-party appraiser and use that as a counter. Most people don't realize you can just... say no to the first offer.

    • 16
      sharp-seal-155

      I used to work on the claims side and honestly? The first total loss offer is almost never the final number. Adjusters use valuation tools that can pull comps from a wide radius, sometimes including markets where that type of vehicle sells for less. Your girlfriend should pull her own comparable listings — same make, model, year, mileage, condition — from local sources and send them over in writing. That alone can move the number. Also make sure any aftermarket upgrades or recent work she paid for is documented and included.

    • 2
      calm-neighbor140

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.