The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
Property damagemellow-mole-881

Insurance totaled my mom's car but the offer is way too low — do we need a lawyer?

Posting this for my mom because she's still shaken up and doesn't really do forums.

About three weeks ago she was driving through a quiet neighborhood street when some guy blew a stop sign doing way more than the speed limit. Slammed into her driver's side so hard both vehicles ended up jumping the curb. Her car got pushed into a utility pole. She walked away physically — thank God — but she's been having headaches and some neck stiffness ever since, and she's honestly traumatized about driving at all now.

The other driver was cited at the scene. Pretty clear-cut fault situation.

Here's the problem: her car was declared a total loss by the at-fault driver's insurance. The offer they came back with is honestly insulting. The car was only a couple years old, she bought it certified pre-owned and kept meticulous service records, new tires six months ago — and their number doesn't come close to what it would actually cost her to replace it with something comparable. We're talking a pretty significant gap.

On top of that, she uses that car to get to a part-time job and to take care of my grandmother. So she's also been racking up rideshare and rental costs while this drags out.

My questions: 1. Can you actually fight the insurance company's valuation on a total loss, or is their number basically final? 2. Does the at-fault driver's personal liability come into play if his insurance doesn't fully cover things? 3. Is this the kind of situation where hiring a personal injury attorney actually makes financial sense, or is it overkill?

I've seen billboards for accident lawyers forever but never thought we'd actually need one. Any real-world experience here would help a lot.

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11 replies

  • 10
    steady-finch-536

    We went through almost the exact same thing last year — clear liability, lowball total loss offer, and a mom who couldn't sleep after the crash. Yes, you can absolutely fight the valuation. We came back with comparable listings from local dealerships showing what a similar car actually sold for, and the number moved. It won't double, but it can improve. Document everything: service records, recent repairs, anything that shows the car was well-maintained.

    • 4
      level-road-soul209

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 20
    cool-stoat-226

    That 'offer' they gave you? It's an opening bid. They are counting on you not knowing that. Adjusters use valuation tools that often pull from lower-end listings and strip out condition upgrades. Always counter with your own research. Print out actual comparable sales in your area, not just listings. And do NOT accept any check or sign anything until you're satisfied — accepting payment can close out your claim.

  • 19
    calm-kestrel-078

    I used to work in claims, so I'll be straight with you. The initial total loss figure is generated by a third-party valuation software and it almost always has room to negotiate. You have the right to dispute the comparable vehicles they used in their calculation — you can literally ask them to send you the valuation report and then challenge specific comps that are lower trim, higher mileage, or in worse condition than your mom's car. Most people don't know they can do that, and adjusters don't volunteer it.

    • 17
      patient-elk-364

      Please make sure your mom gets checked out medically, and soon. Headaches and neck stiffness after an impact like that are not something to brush off. Symptoms from whiplash-type injuries often feel mild at first and then worsen over days or even weeks. She needs an evaluation documented in her medical records regardless of whether she ends up pursuing anything legally — and more importantly, just for her own wellbeing.

  • 11
    keen-vole-207

    On your question about whether an attorney makes sense financially — most personal injury attorneys work on contingency for cases like this, meaning no upfront cost, they take a percentage only if you recover money. For a total loss dispute alone it might be borderline, but if your mom is also dealing with those headaches and neck issues, that changes the picture significantly. Soft tissue injuries and delayed symptoms are very common after side impacts, and they can become a real issue down the road. She should see a doctor now if she hasn't already, both for her health and to create a record.

  • 12
    warm-marmot-529

    Not legal advice, but: the combination of factors you're describing — disputed total loss valuation, ongoing physical symptoms, documented rental/transportation costs, and a clearly liable third party — is exactly the profile where a free consultation with a personal injury attorney is worth your time. Many people assume lawyers are only for catastrophic injuries, but economic losses stack up fast and an experienced attorney knows how to account for all of them. At minimum you'd walk away knowing what your options are. Most PI attorneys offer free consultations.

  • 16
    plain-kestrel-835

    Short answer: yes, get a free consult with a PI attorney. It costs you nothing and you'll know within 30 minutes if it's worth pursuing. The rental costs, the medical stuff, the gap on the car — those aren't small numbers when you add them up. Stop negotiating directly with the insurance company until you at least know what you're dealing with.

    • 9
      gentle-traveler152

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

    • 4
      restless-co-pilot911

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 17
    patient-lynx-144

    I'm so sorry your mom is going through this on top of everything else. The fact that she's scared to drive now is real and valid — that kind of thing doesn't just go away. Please take care of her and don't let the insurance stuff pressure you into rushing any decisions. You have more time than they want you to think you do.