The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagekeen-bison-412

Insurance totaled my truck and now the AirTag says it's... in Poland??

So this is kind of blowing my mind and I need to know if anyone else has experienced this.

About two months ago I got rear-ended pretty badly on the highway — the other driver came out of nowhere and hit me at full speed. My truck was declared a total loss pretty quickly. Fine, whatever, I dealt with the payout and moved on emotionally.

Here's the weird part. I had a small GPS tracker wedged under the rear seat for a camping trip I took last spring and honestly forgot it was in there. The truck left the salvage yard in my state, showed up at what looked like a port facility on the Gulf Coast, and then... went dark for a bit. I figured the battery finally died.

Nope. Thing came back online last week. My truck is apparently sitting in Poland right now.

I'm not upset exactly, just genuinely confused. The truck wasn't worth a fortune — decent shape before the accident but nothing special. How does it make financial sense to ship a totaled vehicle halfway around the world? What are the shipping costs alone on something like that? Aren't there salvage buyers domestically?

I googled around a little and apparently there's a huge market for totaled American vehicles overseas because parts or repair labor costs are so different there. But I still can't wrap my head around the math.

Has anyone else tracked a totaled car or truck to another country? Is this just totally normal and I'm out of the loop? Also does this affect anything on my end — like am I still technically the owner until the title fully clears or is that all done once insurance cuts the check?

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8 replies

  • 16
    quiet-grouse-385

    Oh my gosh yes! My sedan ended up in Morocco after I totaled it. I only found out because my ex was still sharing my Find My. I had the exact same questions — the shipping has to cost a fortune, right? Apparently not as much as we think, especially if they're container-shipping a bunch of wrecks together at once.

  • 12
    hearty-beaver-735

    This is way more common than people realize. Once insurance takes ownership of a total loss, they sell it through a salvage auction — companies like Copart or IAA run these massive online auctions that are open to international buyers. A vehicle that's "totaled" by US standards (meaning repair cost exceeds a certain % of value) can still have a ton of usable parts or even be repairable in countries where labor is much cheaper. They load dozens of wrecks into shipping containers and the per-unit cost comes way down. Your truck being overseas is completely routine on the industry side even though I totally get why it feels surreal.

    • 19
      cool-hare-713

      Honestly kind of wild that your truck gets to see Europe before you do lol. But seriously — if title is clear and the check cleared, you're free. Some people are stuck fighting insurance for months. The fact that you're just mildly puzzled about GPS coordinates means things went pretty smoothly for you.

  • 10
    quiet-fox-532

    To answer your title question — once you signed over the title and accepted the settlement check, ownership transferred to the insurer. They then sold salvage rights, and whoever bought it can do whatever they want with it legally. You're fully off the hook. The title should have already been transferred at the point of settlement. If you have any doubt, you can check your state DMV records online to confirm the title is no longer in your name, just for peace of mind.

  • 5
    tidy-seal-455

    Did you confirm the tracker is actually still inside the truck and not just... sitting at the same location by coincidence? Like could it have fallen out during towing and someone else picked it up? I'm not doubting you, just making sure the signal is actually attached to your vehicle before you go too deep down this rabbit hole.

    • 12
      hearty-wren-968

      You're fine legally. Retrieve the tracker if you ever want it back by contacting whoever holds current ownership through the salvage chain — though honestly that's probably not worth the effort. The more important thing: how's your neck and back after a full-speed rear-end? Get checked out if you haven't. Symptoms from those hits can show up weeks later.

  • 8
    steady-raven-134

    Honestly this kind of freaks me out as a concept — your stuff just floating around the world after an accident while you're still recovering from the whole ordeal. Hope you're doing okay physically after that rear-end hit. Those can be brutal even when they don't look dramatic from the outside.

  • 11
    quiet-stoat-518

    The thing that would bug ME is whether the insurance company got full value out of that salvage auction and whether that was properly factored into your payout calculation. Sometimes insurers undervalue the salvage component when making you an offer, pocket the difference on the back end, and you never know. Not saying that happened to you — just something to keep in mind if the settlement felt low.