The Shoulder
The Shoulder
51
Property damagesharp-dove-421

Insurance valued my totaled car way below market — anyone fight back and win?

So my car got totaled last month when someone ran a red light and T-boned me. I'm still dealing with the whiplash stuff but now I'm also losing my mind over the settlement offer for the car itself.

The insurer sent over their valuation report and I dug into the comparable vehicles they used to justify their number. One of the comps they're leaning on pretty heavily has significantly more miles than mine did — we're talking a meaningful gap — but the mileage adjustment they applied is laughably small. Like, anyone who's shopped for a used car knows that kind of mileage difference matters way more than what they're crediting.

I've been poking around on a few used car listing sites and the actual asking prices for vehicles like mine (with my mileage) are noticeably higher than what the insurer is offering. There's also a trim difference they seem to be glossing over.

Has anyone here actually pushed back on one of these valuation reports? I'm wondering if it's worth:

  • Sending them my own comparable listings from dealer sites
  • Asking them to justify each adjustment in writing
  • Getting an independent appraisal
  • Or just accepting that this is a fight not worth having

I don't want to drag this out forever because I need a car to get to work, but I also don't want to leave real money on the table just because the process feels overwhelming. Would love to hear from anyone who's been through this. Did you get them to budge, or did you just take the hit?

12replies

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

12 replies

  • 20
    patient-dove-849

    I went through almost exactly this two years ago. I pulled comparable listings from three different used car sites, made a simple spreadsheet showing the average asking price for my trim level and mileage range, and emailed it to the adjuster with a polite but firm note asking them to reconsider. They came back with a higher offer within a week. It wasn't everything I wanted but it was a few hundred more than their first number. Totally worth the two hours I spent on it.

  • 7
    tidy-kestrel-335

    Please don't just accept that first offer. Insurers know that a lot of people are stressed, carless, and just want it over with — they count on that. The valuation reports they use are generated by third-party software that has a known tendency to undervalue vehicles. That mileage adjustment gap you noticed? That's not an accident. Document everything and push back in writing.

  • 22
    keen-heron-783

    Former adjuster here. Those automated valuation tools absolutely have adjustments baked in that don't always reflect real market conditions. The comps they pull aren't always apples-to-apples and the mileage adjustments in particular can be pretty conservative. If you send in your own comparable listings — actual dealer listings or certified listings, not private party — that's the language adjusters understand and it does carry weight. Be specific and stay calm in your communication. Emotional pushback gets ignored; data-driven pushback gets reviewed.

    • 7
      restless-mile-marker279

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 8
    cool-finch-210

    A few things that can help: First, request the full valuation report in writing if you don't already have it — you're entitled to it. Second, check whether your state has specific rules about how insurers calculate ACV; some states have consumer protections around this. Third, if you get to an impasse, most policies have an appraisal clause that lets both sides bring in independent appraisers and split the cost of an umpire. It's a process, but it exists for exactly this situation.

  • 18
    daring-bison-810

    Gather three to five real listings for comparable vehicles — same general trim, similar mileage to yours — from actual dealerships. Screenshot them with the prices visible. Email the adjuster and say you believe the valuation doesn't reflect current market conditions and attach your evidence. Keep it short. If they still lowball you, escalate to a supervisor. That's it. Don't overthink it.

  • 14
    gentle-marten-149

    Ugh, this is so stressful on top of already recovering from the accident. Please don't just roll over on this — you deserved a fair payout before any of this happened and you deserve one now. Even if it's uncomfortable to push back, you're not doing anything wrong by asking them to justify their numbers.

    • 8
      thankful-late-shift778

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 6
    quick-stoat-324

    How big is the actual gap between their offer and what you think the car is worth? I'm not saying don't fight it, but the strategy might be different if we're talking a few hundred dollars versus a couple thousand. Also — is this your insurer handling it or the at-fault driver's insurer? That changes the dynamic a bit.

    • 10
      quiet-optimist901

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 11
    careful-marten-600

    Not legal advice, but this is genuinely worth contesting. Insurers are obligated to pay actual cash value and if their methodology is flawed, you have standing to dispute it. If the gap is significant and they won't budge, a PI attorney can sometimes help negotiate the property damage piece too — many offer free consultations. At minimum, don't sign any release until you're satisfied with the vehicle payout.

    • 0
      careful-passenger392

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?