The Shoulder
The Shoulder
54
Insurancekeen-mole-652

Insurance offered me basically nothing for a destroyed rim — is this a joke?

So I'm still kind of in shock over this. A few weeks ago I was driving on the highway when a chunk of debris — looked like it fell off a construction vehicle ahead of me — slammed into the front of my car. Blew out my tire instantly and cracked my wheel so bad I couldn't even put the spare on properly. Had to get towed.

Fast forward to the claim: the adjuster sends over their little itemized breakdown and they're offering me less than 10% of what a replacement actually costs. Like, I went to three different shops and got quotes, and every single one came back in a similar range that is way higher than what the insurance company is proposing to pay.

I asked the adjuster where they even got their number and she kind of mumbled something about "market value" and "parts databases" and honestly it felt like she was reading from a script.

My questions:

  • Can I just... call back and dispute this? Do I need to provide my own quotes?
  • Is there a formal process for pushing back or do I just negotiate over the phone?
  • Should I be worried they'll lowball everything else in my claim too, or is this just how they handle the smaller stuff?

I have full documentation — photos, tow receipt, all three shop quotes. I'm not trying to profit here, I just want my car actually fixed. Any advice from people who've been through this would mean a lot right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 19
    humble-marten-456

    Yes, absolutely call them back and dispute it. I went through almost the exact same thing after road debris wrecked part of my suspension. I sent the adjuster my three shop quotes via email so there was a paper trail, and they bumped the offer up significantly within a week. Don't just accept the first number — they kind of expect you to push back.

    • 19
      hearty-newt-432

      Quick question — whose insurance are you filing with, yours or the construction vehicle's? And did you get any info on the truck that dropped the debris? That actually changes things a fair amount in terms of how much leverage you have and which policy applies.

    • 5
      soft-spoken-offramp874

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 15
    calm-hare-478

    Former adjuster here. Those 'parts databases' they reference are often pulling wholesale or even salvage prices, not what you'd actually pay at a shop. It's not always malicious — sometimes it's just lazy data — but the result is the same: you get lowballed. Your three quotes are exactly the right ammunition. Put it in writing, reference each quote by shop name and date, and ask them specifically to explain the discrepancy. That paper trail matters.

    • 20
      silent-finch-331

      I'd be careful about just calling and chatting casually with the adjuster. Everything you say can influence how they document the claim. Send an email instead so you control the record. And yes — if they're low on one line item, they're probably shaving on others too. Go through the whole estimate line by line.

    • 4
      honest-passenger197

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

  • 11
    kind-beaver-609

    The formal term for what you're doing is a 'supplement claim' — basically asking them to reconsider a specific part of the estimate with new evidence. Most insurers have a process for this, though they don't always advertise it loudly. Your photos and written shop quotes are exactly what you'd want to submit. Keep copies of everything you send and note the date and time of any phone conversations.

    • 4
      quiet-wanderer317

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

  • 16
    steady-wolf-582

    Not my usual lane since I'm more about the injury side of things, but from what I've seen with patients dealing with property claims at the same time as a medical claim — don't let the property dispute distract you from documenting any physical symptoms too. Even what feels like minor whiplash from a sudden stop like that can show up later. Hope you're doing okay physically.

  • 7
    swift-dove-112

    Send the quotes. Don't ask, just send them with a short note saying 'I'm disputing this line item based on actual market pricing — please revise.' Be polite but don't be apologetic about it. You're not being difficult, you're holding them to what they owe you.

  • 17
    candid-kestrel-351

    The fact that you already have three quotes and photos puts you miles ahead of where most people are at this stage. A lot of folks just accept the first offer because they don't realize they can fight it. You clearly know better — that's genuinely half the battle.