The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagepatient-owl-337

Got a diminished value offer from my own insurer after uninsured driver hit me — does this number make sense?

Long story short: guy rear-ended me at a red light about eight months ago. Seemed totally normal at first — he handed me an insurance card, we exchanged info, I filed a claim. Fast forward a few weeks and it turns out the policy on that card had lapsed. Dude was driving around completely uninsured.

So my own insurance had to reclassify everything as an uninsured motorist claim. That whole process took forever and was way more frustrating than I expected, but eventually got my deductible refunded, which was a relief.

Now we're in the diminished value phase and I genuinely have no idea what I'm looking at. My car is just under two years old — I bought it brand new and had barely put any miles on it. The repair bill was substantial, over a third of what the car is currently worth according to a couple of valuation tools I checked. The shop did good work but there's definitely a repair history on the CarFax now, which stresses me out.

My insurer came back with a DV offer that feels... low? It's somewhere around 8% of the car's current market value. I've read conflicting things online — some people say 10% is a good benchmark, others say that's a myth and you should fight for more, especially on a newer vehicle with major structural or panel repairs.

Has anyone actually negotiated a DV claim with their own insurance company? Did you hire an independent appraiser? I'm not sure if it's worth pushing back or if this offer is actually reasonable. Any thoughts appreciated — I'm flying blind here.

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14 replies

  • 20
    steady-elk-158

    What kind of repairs were done exactly — was any of it structural, like frame or unibody work? Because that changes the DV picture a lot compared to just panel and paint. Also, do you know if your insurer is using a specific formula or if they had someone actually appraise the car in person? I'd want to know the basis for their number before deciding if it's worth fighting.

    • 7
      patient-survivor224

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 14
    patient-seal-883

    I don't know much about the money side of this but I just want to say — the stress of dealing with insurance stuff after an accident is so real and so underrated. Hope you're doing okay physically too. Don't let the claim process grind you down to the point where you just accept something to make it stop. Take care of yourself while you fight this.

    • 2
      weary-passenger293

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 12
    tidy-marten-533

    I went through almost the exact same thing — uninsured driver, my own insurance, the whole reclassification mess. When they gave me their first DV number I just accepted it because I was exhausted and didn't know better. I really wish I hadn't. A friend later told me I probably left a decent chunk on the table. If your car is newer and the repair was significant, I'd at least get a second opinion before saying yes.

    • 13
      wise-tern-829

      That 'first offer' is almost never their best offer, especially on diminished value. Insurers know most people don't push back, so they lowball and wait. The fact that they volunteered a number doesn't mean it's fair — it means it's the floor they're comfortable defending. Get an independent DV appraisal. They usually cost a couple hundred bucks and give you something concrete to negotiate with.

    • 8
      tired-dreamer236

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

  • 12
    silent-badger-515

    Hire an independent DV appraiser. Full stop. It'll cost you a few hundred bucks, they'll give you a written report with a defensible number, and then you go back to your insurer with that. If they still lowball you, you escalate from there. Sitting on the fence and wondering isn't going to get you more money.

    • 3
      tired-optimist961

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

  • 11
    calm-dove-556

    Former adjuster here. The way a lot of carriers calculate diminished value internally is honestly pretty formulaic and almost always favors the company. There's a commonly used method that caps DV at 10% of the vehicle's pre-loss value and then applies a bunch of multipliers that reduce it further based on mileage and damage severity. The result looks official but it's not gospel. An independent appraisal from someone who specializes in DV can and does move the needle — I saw it happen regularly. You're not being unreasonable to push back.

    • 10
      steady-wanderer510

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

  • 10
    gentle-tern-224

    One practical thing: document everything about the repairs in writing now if you haven't already. Get the repair order with the specific parts replaced (OEM vs. aftermarket matters), any notations about structural repair, all of it. If you do hire an independent DV appraiser or eventually involve an attorney, that paperwork is what they'll use to build your case. The stronger the documentation, the stronger the argument that your car's resale value took a real hit.

    • 3
      level-overpass619

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

  • 7
    swift-vole-457

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the state you're in matters a lot for DV claims, and so does whether you're claiming against your own policy vs. the at-fault driver's. Since this flipped to a UM claim, the dynamics are a little different than a standard third-party claim. Worth a quick conversation with a PI attorney — a lot of them do free consults and can at least tell you if the offer is in a reasonable range for your area. The appraisal route the others mentioned is usually step one regardless.