The Shoulder
The Shoulder
54
Property damagehumble-lynx-789

Insurance totaled my car but won't let me buy it back?? Is that even legal?

So here's my situation and I'm honestly baffled.

I've had my SUV for years and it's been completely reliable — well maintained, no prior issues. A few weeks ago someone ran a red light and clipped the front corner pretty good. Airbags didn't deploy, I drove it home. The frame looks fine to me, it's mostly cosmetic damage plus one headlight assembly.

Insurance comes back and says it's a total loss because the repair estimate crossed some threshold relative to the car's market value. Fine, I get how that math works. But here's the thing — I don't want to replace it right now. The car market is still a mess and I know this vehicle. I just want to buy it back from them, fix it on my own timeline with a salvage title, and move on.

When I called to ask about a buyback they basically told me they "don't offer owner-retentions on total losses." I'd never even heard that phrase before. When I pushed back they just kept repeating the same script.

But wait — I own this car outright. There's no lienholder. How can they just... take it? I thought in a total loss situation the insurer pays you ACV and then they take possession, but I assumed that was negotiable if you wanted to keep it?

Has anyone actually fought this and won? Is this a state-by-state thing? I feel like I'm being steamrolled and I don't even know what rights I have here.

Any insight appreciated — especially if you've been through something similar.

10replies

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

10 replies

  • 10
    mellow-dove-903

    This happened to me almost exactly. My car got totaled after a side-swipe and I wanted to keep it too. What I found out is that owner-retention (yeah that's the real term) IS a thing in most states, but some insurers make it really difficult or claim they don't do it. I ended up having to escalate to a supervisor and explicitly say I knew my rights under my state's regulations. They magically found a way to make it work after that. Don't take the first 'no' as the final answer.

    • 0
      kind-rider114

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 16
    calm-hare-759

    Of course they're saying no — if you buy it back they have to reduce your payout by the salvage value, which means less control over the whole transaction. Adjusters are trained to move total losses through the pipeline fast. The moment you slow that down and ask questions, some of them just stonewall. Push back in writing. Email is your friend here because it creates a paper trail they can't just wave away.

    • 16
      silent-seal-660

      Not legal advice, but the 'we don't do that' response is a red flag worth investigating. Insurance companies are regulated at the state level and most states have specific statutes governing total loss settlements, including whether an insured can retain a vehicle. If they're refusing something your state actually requires them to offer, that's a potential bad faith issue. Might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your leverage — you'd be surprised how fast an insurer's position changes when they know you've talked to someone.

  • 13
    brave-fox-408

    Okay so I used to work claims and here's the real deal: most states actually do allow owner-retention on total losses, and the insurer is supposed to deduct the salvage value from your settlement. The line you're getting about 'we don't do that anymore' is almost certainly a rep who doesn't know the process or is just trying to close the file quickly. Ask specifically for their total loss department or a senior adjuster, not just whoever answered the phone. Also — look up your state's department of insurance website. A lot of them have plain-language pages about total loss procedures and your rights as the registered owner.

  • 20
    sharp-wren-161

    From a process standpoint, what you're describing should generally be possible as long as there's no lienholder complicating things. When an insurer totals a vehicle they're essentially purchasing it from you in exchange for the ACV payout — but in many states you can negotiate to retain the vehicle for its salvage value, meaning they pay you the difference. The key phrase to use is 'owner-retention option.' Put your request in writing and ask them to cite specifically which policy language or regulation prevents it. If they can't, that's telling.

  • 16
    mellow-fox-823

    File a complaint with your state's department of insurance if they keep stonewalling. It takes like 20 minutes online and insurers take those complaints seriously because they're regulated. Also document every call — date, time, name of rep, what they said. You might need that.

  • 20
    tidy-marten-147

    Quick question — did you actually get the denial in writing or just verbally over the phone? Because sometimes reps say stuff that's just flat wrong. I'd call back, ask the same question to a different person, and see if you get a different answer before assuming this is company policy.

  • 10
    curious-raven-890

    Ugh this sounds so frustrating, especially when you're already dealing with the stress of an accident. I really hope you get this sorted out — it seems totally unfair that they can just take your car when you've been paying premiums forever. Rooting for you.

    • 6
      steady-walker942

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.