The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagewarm-wren-267

Insurance called my nearly-new car a total loss after a parking lot crash — does this add up??

Still kind of in shock writing this out. About a month ago I was slowly rolling through a busy shopping center lot — we're talking maybe 10 mph — when another driver came flying out from between two parked SUVs on my left and slammed right into the side of my car. I had zero time to react. Both my airbags fired, my seatbelts locked hard, and my door frame got pushed inward. The other car? Barely a scratch. Wild.

Police came, filed a report, other driver was cited. I've got a PI attorney handling the injury side — my neck and shoulder are still messed up — and they said they'd help with the property damage piece too.

Here's what's killing me: I've owned this car for less than two years. Still have a solid chunk of loan left on it. It went straight to a body shop after the tow and the tech there said it looked repairable to him. Then the other driver's insurance adjuster swoops in, spends like 20 minutes looking at it, and suddenly it's a total loss.

My attorney basically told me fighting the total loss valuation is pointless and not really their lane. I get that, but it feels like I'm getting punished for someone else's mistake. If their payout doesn't cover what I still owe on the loan, I'm genuinely in a hole here — and I didn't do anything wrong.

Has anyone else had a nearly-new car get totaled from what seemed like a moderate hit? Is the airbag deployment + structural shift really enough to push it over the threshold? And what do I even do about the gap between the payout and what I owe the lender? Feeling pretty lost right now.

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13 replies

  • 22
    humble-fox-429

    This happened to me almost exactly. My car was two years old, airbags went off in a side impact, and I was convinced it was fixable. Nope — total loss. The thing nobody tells you is that once the airbags deploy, the repair cost skyrockets because replacing the entire airbag system is insanely expensive on top of the structural work. That alone can push a car past the total loss threshold even if it looks okay from the outside. Doesn't make it hurt less, I know.

  • 13
    warm-kestrel-196

    I used to work on the carrier side and I'll be straight with you — airbag deployment plus any frame or unibody shift almost always tips the math into total loss territory. It's not always a shady call. The threshold is usually somewhere around 70-75% of the car's actual cash value, and between the airbag module replacements, the sensors, the restraint system, AND the structural repair, the numbers add up fast even on cars that don't look destroyed. That said, you absolutely have the right to request the full damage estimate and the ACV calculation they used. Ask for it in writing. If their ACV number seems low, you can push back with comparable listings in your market.

  • 14
    quick-beaver-357

    Don't just accept their first ACV offer. Seriously. Adjusters lowball on actual cash value all the time and most people don't know they can negotiate that part. Pull every comparable vehicle listing you can find — same year, same trim, similar mileage — in your region and build your own number. If theirs is significantly lower, put it in writing and dispute it. They have more flexibility than they let on.

    • 10
      steady-commuter580

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 24
    gentle-grouse-429

    The gap between what insurance pays out and what you owe the lender is real and it trips people up constantly. A few things worth checking: (1) Did you have GAP insurance or a GAP waiver through your lender or dealership when you bought the car? It's sometimes bundled in and people forget. (2) Even if you didn't, some states have specific rules about how insurers calculate ACV for newer vehicles. Your attorney may say property damage isn't their lane, but it might be worth one conversation specifically about the ACV dispute — that's separate from the injury claim.

  • 7
    curious-swan-827

    Please don't let the car stress overshadow the fact that you were in a real impact with airbag deployment. I see people downplay their symptoms after crashes like this — neck stiffness, shoulder pain, headaches — and then six weeks later things are significantly worse. Make sure you're keeping every appointment, documenting everything, and not just pushing through the pain because life is busy. The injury claim matters, and your records need to reflect how you actually feel.

    • 8
      honest-dreamer481

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 10
    bold-bison-774

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with all of this on top of recovering from the actual injuries. It genuinely isn't fair that you're scrambling over a loan gap because someone else drove recklessly through a parking lot. I hope you've got people around you helping shoulder some of this stress.

    • 4
      kind-rider250

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

  • 9
    warm-grouse-990

    Three things to do right now: 1) Get the itemized repair estimate AND the ACV breakdown from the insurer — in writing, today. 2) Check your loan documents and any paperwork from when you bought the car for GAP coverage. 3) Look up 15-20 comparable vehicles listed for sale in your metro area and screenshot them. If their ACV is off, you have ammunition to counter. Don't sign or accept anything until you've done those three things.

  • 15
    tidy-raven-259

    Quick question — did the body shop that said it looked 'repairable' actually put that in writing with an estimate? Because a tech eyeballing it in person versus a full teardown estimate are very different things. Sometimes what looks surface-level turns out to be a lot worse once they start pulling panels. I'm not saying the insurer is right, just that the shop's gut read might not mean as much as you're hoping.

  • 13
    humble-tern-053

    I know this feels like a nightmare right now, but here's the thing — a totaled car with a documented at-fault driver and a solid police report is actually a cleaner situation than a disputed-fault mess. You have leverage on the injury side, and if you negotiate the ACV up even a little, that matters. You'll get through the car piece. Focus your energy on healing and let the paper stuff work itself out step by step.

    • 4
      calm-survivor379

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.