The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagebold-raven-820

Insurance lowballed my totaled car because of its rebuilt title — can I fight this?

So I got rear-ended pretty badly at a red light about three weeks ago and my car got totaled. Not my fault at all — the other driver ran into me full speed, police report confirms it, the whole thing.

Here's where it gets frustrating. My car had a rebuilt title (previously salvage, but it was professionally repaired and reinspected years ago — ran perfectly). I'd had it for almost two years with zero issues. When I went to look up what comparable vehicles were actually selling for in my area, I found similar ones listed anywhere from a few thousand dollars more than what the insurance company offered me.

The adjuster basically just pointed to the rebuilt title and slashed the value way down. Like, that's it. That's their whole argument. Doesn't matter that the car was mechanically sound, looked great, had new tires, recent brake job — none of that seemed to count.

I feel like I'm being penalized twice: once for getting hit by someone else, and again for owning a car with a history the insurance company can use against me.

Has anyone successfully pushed back on a lowball ACV offer for a rebuilt-title vehicle? I'm wondering if things like:

  • Screenshots of actual local listings for comparable cars
  • Receipts for recent repairs/upgrades
  • An independent appraisal

...would actually move the needle, or if I'm just wasting my time. Really don't want to just accept whatever number they throw at me if it's not fair. Any experience with this appreciated.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 19
    calm-grouse-541

    Don't trust their valuation tool. Seriously. Insurers use proprietary software that almost always spits out numbers favorable to them. Those tools aren't magic — they're built to save the company money. The listings you find yourself in the real market are way more representative of what you'd actually have to pay to replace your car. Document everything and don't accept the first offer without a fight.

  • 15
    sharp-elk-699

    Not legal advice, but this is a really common dispute and you generally do have the right to negotiate ACV. The strongest position is usually a combination of real market comps plus documentation of the car's condition — maintenance records, repair receipts, photos. An independent appraisal can cost a little upfront but sometimes pays for itself. If the gap between their offer and fair value is significant, it might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney who handles property damage disputes.

    • 12
      bright-beaver-347

      Are you doing okay physically? Sometimes after a rear-end collision people feel fine at first and then soreness, stiffness, or headaches show up days later. Just make sure you're not so focused on the car stuff that you ignore how your body feels. The property damage battle is real, but so is making sure you're actually checked out medically.

    • 4
      careful-optimist757

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

  • 11
    wise-lynx-729

    A few things worth knowing: you can formally dispute the ACV (actual cash value) offer in writing — doing it in writing matters. You can also request an independent appraisal, and some states require the insurer to participate in a formal appraisal process if you invoke it. Look up your state's department of insurance website to see what rules apply to total loss disputes in your area. It varies a lot by state but there are often more consumer protections than people realize.

    • 18
      bright-otter-202

      Three things: get comps, get them in writing, send them to the adjuster in a formal email. Don't call — email everything so there's a paper trail. If they still won't budge, file a complaint with your state's insurance commissioner. That sometimes gets adjusters moving faster than anything else.

  • 10
    clever-heron-714

    I went through almost the exact same thing last year. My car also had a rebuilt title and the adjuster acted like it was worthless. What actually helped me was pulling a bunch of real listings — like from Facebook Marketplace and a couple of dealer sites — for the same make, model, year, and similar mileage WITH rebuilt titles in my region. I put them all in a document and sent it over formally in writing. They didn't budge a ton, but I did get a few hundred more added. It felt like a small win but honestly the process was exhausting.

    • 2
      honest-dreamer689

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

  • 10
    patient-mole-751

    Quick question — when you say the car was professionally repaired and reinspected, do you have documentation of that? Like the actual reinspection paperwork or repair records? That could be the difference between 'rebuilt title' meaning 'properly restored' versus the adjuster treating it like an unknown. If you can't show the quality of the prior repair, their argument gets a little stronger, unfortunately.

    • 7
      weathered-road-soul363

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 7
    quiet-marmot-682

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll be honest with you — rebuilt title deductions are often applied as a flat percentage without much nuance. It's kind of a lazy default. What can actually shift things is if you come back with solid comps showing rebuilt-title vehicles in your area selling close to what a clean-title version would go for, because in some markets the gap really is smaller than the formula assumes. Also, asking them to specifically show you their comparable listings is totally within your rights. Make them justify the number.

    • 1
      careful-parent927

      How long did it end up taking in your case?