The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagequiet-kestrel-119

Insurance says my car might be a total loss after a low-speed hit — does that seem right?

So this happened about two weeks ago in a grocery store parking lot. I was completely stopped in a driving lane waiting for someone to pull out of a spot, and an SUV just reversed straight into my front passenger side. Decent sized dent, hood is slightly misaligned, headlight housing is cracked, and there's some paint transfer and scratching across the bumper and fender.

The other driver was super apologetic and admitted fault on the spot, and their insurance accepted liability pretty quickly which I was honestly relieved about.

Here's where I'm confused though — the shop the insurance company sent me to said there might be some minor structural concern near the front crumple zone, and now the adjuster is throwing around the word "total loss." My car is only about four years old with around 55k miles on it. It drives completely fine. No warning lights, no weird sounds, nothing.

I always thought total loss meant like... the car was destroyed? Not a parking lot bump from someone going maybe 5 mph.

A few questions swirling in my head:

  • How do they actually calculate whether it's a total loss?
  • If it IS totaled, am I stuck with whatever they offer me?
  • Should I be getting an independent estimate somewhere?
  • What happens to my car's value if it's NOT totaled but gets repaired — does a damage history kill the resale?

I'm not trying to be greedy here, I just don't want to get stuck with a lowball payout on a car I still owe money on. Any experience with this would be really helpful. Feeling pretty lost honestly.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 16
    calm-heron-444

    Please don't let them use their preferred shop as the only voice here. That shop has a relationship with the insurance company. Get an independent estimate from somewhere YOU choose. And read everything carefully before signing anything — once you accept a total loss settlement, that's usually it.

    • 8
      thankful-offramp108

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 16
    steady-marten-953

    Not legal advice, but — if the car is totaled and you still have a loan balance, you want to make sure the payout covers what you owe. If it doesn't, that gap is your problem unless you had gap insurance. Also worth knowing: you may have a claim for diminished value even if it's repaired instead. Worth at least a consultation with a PI attorney to understand your options. Many do free calls.

    • 16
      plain-elk-966

      A few practical things: First, request the full written estimate and the ACV calculation in writing — you're entitled to see exactly how they got to their number. Second, if they total it, you typically have the option to buy the salvage title back from them at a reduced payout if you want to keep the car. Third, document everything right now — photos, any communications, the police or incident report if one was filed. That paper trail matters more than people think.

    • 7
      kind-walker674

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 13
    humble-kestrel-217

    Go get your own appraisal from an independent shop, today. Don't wait. And look up your state's total loss threshold — it varies and you should know the actual rule they're working under, not just take the adjuster's word for it.

  • 8
    mellow-finch-066

    I went through almost the exact same thing last year — low speed hit, car looked way less damaged than I expected, and the insurance company still called it a total. I was shocked. Turns out once they factor in labor rates and parts costs, even moderate damage on a newer car can push it over that threshold pretty fast. Definitely don't just accept the first number they give you. I pushed back with my own comparable listings and got a few thousand more.

    • 9
      sharp-stoat-818

      So total loss is determined by comparing the estimated repair cost to the car's actual cash value — and depending on the state, once repairs hit somewhere around 70-80% of ACV, they'll call it. The thing people don't realize is that repair costs have absolutely exploded. Labor rates, sensors, calibrations after any structural work... it adds up shockingly fast on a modern vehicle. That said, their ACV offer is negotiable. Pull your own comps — look at actual listings for your same year, mileage, trim, and condition in your region. That's the same thing I used to do when setting values, and you can absolutely challenge it.

  • 8
    bright-crow-909

    Ugh this is so stressful, especially when you didn't do anything wrong. I really hope you get a fair shake on this. The whole system just feels designed to confuse people who aren't used to dealing with it.

  • 7
    steady-heron-172

    When you say there's a "structural concern" — did they actually put that in writing, or was it verbal? And was this a dealership body shop or an independent place? I'd want to know a lot more about what exactly they found before assuming the worst. Sometimes shops flag things cautiously to cover themselves and it doesn't always mean what it sounds like.

  • 6
    keen-raven-511

    Kind of off the main topic but — are you doing okay physically? Sometimes in low-speed impacts people feel fine right after and then neck or back soreness creeps in a few days later. If anything feels off, even minor, please get checked out and make sure it's documented. Just don't want you to brush something off and have it become a bigger issue.