The Shoulder
The Shoulder
63
Car accidentscool-kestrel-553

Got rear-ended in a brand new car with 400 miles on it — what am I actually owed?

Still kind of in shock writing this out, but here goes.

About three weeks ago I drove my brand new SUV off the lot — literally had it less than a month. On my way home from work one evening, I was sitting at a red light and got slammed into from behind. Hard enough that I was thrown forward into my seatbelt and my neck immediately started aching.

The other driver was cited at the scene, and their insurance has already acknowledged their person was at fault. So that part feels settled. But then they sent me this weirdly small initial check — apparently to satisfy some kind of prompt-payment requirement — and a letter that made it sound like that was just the beginning of the process. I'm not totally sure what to make of it.

The rear bumper looks rough. Body shop hasn't given me a full estimate yet but it's clearly more than cosmetic. My bigger concern honestly is diminished value — this thing had under 500 miles on it. Even after a perfect repair, a vehicle history report is going to show accident damage. That has to affect resale, right?

And then there's me. My neck and upper back are still really sore. I went to urgent care the day after and they said soft tissue strain, possible whiplash. I've got a follow-up scheduled but I'm already worried about how long recovery takes and whether I'll need PT.

Questions swirling in my head:

  • How do I actually pursue diminished value on a nearly-new vehicle?
  • Should I be talking to the insurance adjuster at all right now, or keeping my mouth shut?
  • Does having dashcam footage of the whole thing matter at this point since fault is admitted?

Any experience with this kind of situation would be huge right now. Thanks.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 14
    cool-elk-326

    Oh man, this hits close to home. I was rear-ended about two years ago in a car I'd owned for maybe six weeks. The diminished value piece is REAL and the insurance company will absolutely try to lowball you or pretend it doesn't exist. I had to push hard and get an independent appraisal done — the number they came back with on their own was laughable compared to what a third-party appraiser said. Definitely don't just accept whatever they offer on that front.

    • 7
      honest-passenger453

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 13
    curious-raven-273

    That 'initial check to meet the legal deadline' thing is a classic move. They're not doing you a favor — they're starting a paper trail and hoping you cash it without thinking too hard. Some states treat cashing certain checks as partial settlement acceptance, so before you do anything with that check, make sure you understand what you're signing off on. Read every single word on the back of it.

  • 23
    bright-lynx-459

    Former adjuster here. A few things from the inside:

    1. Diminished value claims on nearly-new vehicles are some of the strongest you can make. A car with under 1,000 miles showing accident history on a report is genuinely worth less, and adjusters know it — they're just counting on you not knowing how to document and push it. 2. That early check is a liquidity payment, not a settlement. But like others said, read what's printed on or attached to it before depositing. 3. Your dashcam footage still matters even with admitted fault — it can support the severity of the impact if there's ever a dispute about your injury claims later.

    • 5
      weary-wanderer718

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 20
    kind-lynx-255

    Please don't brush off the neck and back symptoms even if they feel manageable right now. Whiplash injuries are sneaky — the inflammation and muscle damage can take days or even a couple of weeks to fully declare themselves. Keep every appointment, follow through on any imaging they recommend, and document your symptoms in writing (even just a notes app on your phone each day). That record matters if this drags out medically or legally.

  • 9
    plain-lynx-076

    On the diminished value question — most states do allow you to claim it on top of repair costs, but the process usually requires an independent appraisal from a qualified appraiser, not just your opinion or the body shop's guess. The insurance company will likely have their own number that's much lower. Having your own appraisal gives you something concrete to negotiate from. Also, keep every single receipt, every medical copay, every rideshare or rental cost while your car is being repaired. All of that can be part of your claim. Not legal advice, just general process stuff.

  • 12
    cool-seal-446

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the combination of a nearly-new vehicle, documented soft tissue injury, and admitted fault is exactly the kind of situation where people often leave real money on the table by settling too fast. Adjusters are trained to close claims quickly and cheaply. At minimum, I'd suggest getting a free consultation with a PI attorney before you sign or cash anything beyond that initial payment — most won't charge unless they recover something for you. The dashcam footage is a bonus, not irrelevant.

  • 14
    tidy-mole-185

    Stop talking to their adjuster without knowing your rights first. You're not required to give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance. Be polite, but you can absolutely say you're still evaluating the situation. Every conversation you have is information they can use to minimize your payout.

    • 18
      genuine-badger-811

      Quick question — when you say they 'acknowledged fault,' do you mean in writing from the adjuster, or just verbally over the phone? That distinction matters more than people realize. Verbal acknowledgment can get walked back. If it's not in writing somewhere, I'd ask for that confirmation in an email before moving forward with anything.

    • 8
      careful-wanderer433

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

  • 9
    cool-sparrow-661

    I know this feels overwhelming but honestly — admitted fault AND dashcam footage puts you in a genuinely strong position compared to a lot of people who come here. You've got the documentation, you went to urgent care promptly, and you're asking the right questions early. That foundation matters a lot as this plays out.