The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
Property damagekeen-finch-463

Insurance moved my car to an auction lot before telling me it's totaled — is this normal??

I'm honestly baffled right now and could use some perspective from people who've been through this.

About two weeks ago I got hit pretty hard at an intersection — wasn't my fault, the other driver blew through and clipped my front end bad enough that my car had to be towed. The at-fault driver's insurance has been handling the claim and they asked for my okay to transfer my car from the tow yard to their own storage facility so an adjuster could look at it. Fine, I said yes.

Fast forward to today — I haven't heard a single word about whether it's a total loss or repairable. No estimate, no call, nothing. Just silence. So I did a little digging and looked up the address they gave me for where they moved the car.

You guys. My car is listed on a salvage auction website. Full listing — photos, VIN details, condition notes, the whole thing. There's even a "place bid" button. Meanwhile the claims rep told me just yesterday they "haven't made a determination yet."

How is my car already on an auction platform if no total-loss decision has been made? I haven't signed any title over. I haven't accepted any settlement offer. I haven't agreed to anything beyond letting them move it for inspection.

I don't want to overreact but this feels really wrong. Has anyone else had something like this happen? Do I need to pump the brakes on this whole process and get someone in my corner before I say another word to their adjuster?

12replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

12 replies

  • 21
    brave-marmot-245

    I don't want to dismiss your concern but — did you look closely at the listing? Some of those salvage platforms show listings as "pending" or "preview" before a vehicle is actually available for bidding. It could be a pre-staged listing that doesn't go live unless the total loss is confirmed. I'm not saying everything's fine, but worth checking whether there's actually an active bid timer or if it's just sitting as a draft listing.

  • 17
    cool-swift-914

    This happened to me almost exactly. My car showed up on one of those salvage sites before I even got a settlement offer. Turns out the insurance company had pre-listed it "pending" while the adjuster finished paperwork — but nobody told me that was a thing they do. I felt completely blindsided. Definitely keep pushing them for answers in writing, not just over the phone.

    • 22
      clever-otter-460

      Okay so I used to work in auto claims and I can tell you — this is more common than it should be. Some carriers use third-party salvage vendors who automatically generate auction listings the moment a vehicle is flagged as a likely total, even before the official determination is finalized. It's a workflow efficiency thing on their end, but it's terrible communication to the vehicle owner. That said, no title transfer can happen without your signature, so your car isn't actually sold yet. But I'd stop taking verbal updates and start asking for everything in email — claim status, determination timeline, all of it.

    • 18
      swift-bison-715

      The fact that they're listing it while telling you "no decision yet" is a red flag to me. They're setting the narrative — once something is listed as salvage, they're going to push you toward a total-loss payout fast and low. Don't let them rush you into signing anything. Get an independent appraisal of your car's pre-accident value before you accept a single number they throw at you.

    • 4
      mellow-mile-marker864

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

  • 15
    hearty-grouse-357

    Stop calling. Send an email right now that says something like: "I have not received a total-loss determination, I have not accepted any settlement, and I have not authorized the sale or transfer of my vehicle. Please confirm in writing the current status of my claim." Short, factual, documented. Phone calls are their friend because nothing is on record.

    • 3
      patient-optimist105

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

  • 13
    kind-crow-421

    A few practical things worth knowing: you have the right to request the total-loss valuation report once they make a determination, and in most states you can dispute it if you think their number is off. Also, until you sign a release and the title is transferred, that car is still legally yours. I'd send a written message (email is fine) to the claims rep today confirming that no settlement has been agreed to and no title transfer has been authorized. Just to create a paper trail. Not legal advice — just process stuff.

    • 9
      weary-driver318

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 13
    kind-crane-965

    The listing alone doesn't necessarily mean they've acted improperly yet, but the combination of no formal determination, no written offer, and your vehicle already appearing in a commercial auction database is worth taking seriously. If they present a lowball total-loss offer now, you'll want to know your car's actual market value before you respond. Talking to a PI attorney for a free consult at this stage costs you nothing. Not legal advice.

    • 12
      clear-wolf-861

      That would stress me out SO much. Your car is basically being sold out from under you while they're still stringing you along? I really hope you get some solid answers fast. Please don't let them pressure you into accepting something quick just to make it go away.

    • 7
      mellow-overpass293

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.