The Shoulder
The Shoulder
66
Property damageclear-crow-780

Insurance saying my car might be totaled — does that even make sense?

So about ten days ago I got rear-ended at a red light by someone who was clearly not paying attention. It wasn't a high-speed crash or anything dramatic — honestly I thought I'd walk away with maybe a dented bumper and call it a day.

Well, I had an independent appraiser come look at it and the repair estimate came back way higher than I expected. Visually the rear end looks rough but the car still drives. The one thing that's been bugging me is the shifter — it's been weirdly resistant when I try to get it into park. Like I have to wiggle it and push harder than I used to. Didn't have that problem before the accident, so I'm assuming the impact did something under there.

Here's my situation: I bought this car not too long ago for a pretty modest amount. Nothing fancy. And now I'm reading online that if repair costs hit a certain percentage of what the car is actually worth, insurers just declare it a total loss instead of fixing it.

My questions for anyone who's been through this:

  • How do insurance companies actually calculate whether to total a car vs. repair it?
  • If they do total it, am I going to get enough back to even replace it with something comparable?
  • Should I be worried about that transmission/shifter issue being a sign of something bigger going on structurally?
  • Do I have any say in whether they total it or fix it?

I still need a car for work. The rental they gave me is on a timer and I'm already stressing about what happens when that runs out. Any advice from people who've been in a similar spot would be really helpful. I feel like I'm just waiting around for bad news at this point.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 20
    daring-swift-156

    I went through almost this exact thing last year. My car looked fine on the outside after a rear-end hit but the frame had a slight bend they found later. The insurer totaled it even though it still drove okay. The payout was... not great, but I was able to negotiate it up a little by finding comparable listings in my area and sending them over. Don't just accept the first number they give you.

  • 18
    swift-fox-916

    So here's how it actually works from the inside — most insurers use what's called a total loss threshold, which is a percentage of the vehicle's actual cash value (ACV). Every state is a little different, but once repair costs hit somewhere around 70–80% of what the car is worth on the market today, they'll typically total it rather than repair it. The ACV is based on condition, mileage, and local comparable sales, not what you paid for it. If your car was already on the lower end value-wise, it doesn't take much damage to cross that line. That shifter issue is something an adjuster would flag — transmission components can add significantly to a repair estimate.

    • 3
      tired-walker808

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 20
    hearty-beaver-585

    Watch out — if they do total it, they're going to lowball the ACV. That's basically standard practice. Pull up listings for similar cars in your area right now, screenshot everything, and be ready to counter their offer. They're counting on you just accepting whatever number they produce.

  • 20
    cool-fox-830

    Hey, I know you're focused on the car stuff, but please don't ignore your body in all of this. Rear-end collisions can cause soft tissue injuries that don't show up until days later — neck stiffness, headaches, lower back pain. If anything feels off, get checked out sooner rather than later. Documenting any physical symptoms now also matters if this turns into a bigger claim.

  • 19
    silent-lynx-639

    A couple of things worth knowing: first, you generally do have the right to dispute a total loss valuation — you can hire your own appraiser and in some states there's an appraisal clause that lets both sides pick appraisers and settle disagreements through an umpire. Second, ask the insurer specifically how they calculated the ACV and what comps they used. They're required to share that in most states. Also document the shifter issue in writing with them ASAP so it's on record as part of this claim. Not legal advice, just stuff I see come up a lot.

    • 20
      careful-seal-408

      Quick question — did the other driver's insurance accept liability already, or is this still in dispute? Because that changes the timeline a lot. Also, is the rental coverage coming from their policy or yours? Just want to make sure you're not burning through your own coverage unnecessarily.

  • 7
    bold-seal-634

    Don't overthink it — get a second repair estimate from a shop you trust, and separately look up your car's value on a few different used-car sites. That gives you real numbers to work with instead of just waiting for the insurer to tell you what your car is worth. Knowledge is leverage here.

  • 11
    humble-seal-415

    I know it feels awful right now, but if they do total it, you're not necessarily worse off. You get the cash value, you don't have a repaired car with accident history dragging down its resale value, and you can shop around for something you actually want. It's stressful in the moment but sometimes a total loss payout ends up being the cleaner outcome.

    • 2
      gentle-walker248

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

    • 4
      restless-mile-marker348

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.