The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
careful-heron-078

Hit in a parking lot — my project truck is worth more to me than any 'book value'

So I've been slowly restoring an older pickup for about two years now. New engine, suspension work, fresh exhaust — I've put serious time and money into it. It's not a show truck or anything fancy, but it runs great and I genuinely love it.

Last week someone clipped the rear quarter panel and bed rail while I was parked at a grocery store. They did leave a note (small miracle), and their insurance has accepted liability.

Here's my problem: the actual market value of this truck according to any valuation tool is probably somewhere around $3,000–$4,000. But I have nearly double that in parts and labor already in it — not counting the body work I haven't done yet. The repair estimate I got is already pushing past what the insurance company will likely say the truck is 'worth.'

I'm worried they're just going to total it and hand me a check that doesn't come close to covering what I've actually put in.

A few things I'm wondering:

  • Does the money I've invested in mechanical upgrades count for anything when they calculate value?
  • Can I fight a total-loss determination if I want to keep repairing it?
  • Is there any such thing as 'diminished value' on an older vehicle like this?

I'm not trying to get rich off this — I just want to end up with my truck back in the condition it was heading toward. Anyone been through something like this with a project vehicle or an older rig that meant more to you than its book value suggests?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 15
    steady-lynx-414

    Ugh, I went through almost exactly this with an old 4x4 I'd been building out for off-road. Insurance came back with a laughably low total-loss offer. What saved me was having a folder full of receipts — every part, every shop invoice. I pushed back hard and they did bump the number, not to everything I'd put in, but better than the first offer. Document absolutely everything you have receipts for.

  • 6
    clever-wren-085

    The adjuster's first offer is almost never their best offer — especially on older vehicles where they know most people don't know how to fight back. They're going to pull a valuation from some database that has zero idea your engine was just rebuilt. Don't accept the first number. Don't even act excited or grateful on the phone. Just say you're 'reviewing it' and buy yourself time.

    • 6
      kind-wanderer212

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

  • 21
    sharp-marten-300

    Former adjuster here. When we totaled older vehicles, we used market comps — basically similar trucks listed for sale nearby. What a lot of claimants don't realize is you can actually submit your own comparable listings to challenge the valuation. Find trucks in similar or worse condition selling for more than what they offered you and send those in writing. It works more often than you'd think. Also, in most states if it's totaled you can elect to keep the salvage title and they just deduct the salvage value from the payout — so you could potentially keep the truck AND get a check.

  • 17
    spry-seal-776

    A couple of things worth knowing: most states have specific rules around total-loss thresholds — it's usually when repair costs hit a certain percentage of the vehicle's actual cash value. If you're near that line, it's worth getting a second repair estimate because the numbers matter a lot. Also, the 'actual cash value' isn't always set in stone. Documented upgrades — especially mechanical ones — can sometimes be factored in if you push for it with proper receipts. An independent appraisal is another option if you really can't agree with the insurance company. Not legal advice, just process stuff I've seen come up.

    • 1
      patient-commuter112

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 14
    calm-swift-855

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the gap between what you've invested and what insurance will offer on an older project vehicle is one of the most frustrating situations in property damage claims. Diminished value claims on older vehicles are tough — courts and insurers tend to argue there wasn't much market value to diminish. Where people have the most success is challenging the ACV calculation itself with documentation. If the dispute is significant enough, it might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options — some handle property damage alongside injury claims.

    • 13
      patient-finch-957

      Here's the blunt version: gather every single receipt you have, get at least two independent repair estimates, and do not sign or accept anything until you've looked up your state's total-loss laws. Some states are more favorable than others. If they total it and you want to keep it, ask about the salvage option — you might walk away with both a partial payout AND your truck.

    • 18
      tidy-marmot-378

      Quick question — did you have your own insurance on this truck, or are you going purely through the at-fault driver's carrier? And was the work documented anywhere beyond receipts, like a shop that did some of it? The answers change the options a bit. Also curious what state you're in because total-loss thresholds vary a lot.

  • 3
    clear-heron-977

    Two years of work — that's so frustrating. I hope you're able to get a fair outcome. Even if the money side works out, the stress of dealing with all of this on top of losing progress on something you care about is real. Hang in there.

    • 4
      steady-commuter467

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?