The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagegentle-owl-163

Insurance wants rental back before we've settled on the totaled car — can they do that?

So my dad was the registered owner of the car I was driving when I got rear-ended at a red light about three weeks ago. The guy who hit me was going fast enough that I got pushed into the intersection and the car is a complete loss. At-fault driver's insurance has already accepted liability — no dispute there.

Here's where it gets messy. The total-loss offer they sent is way below what I'm finding comparable vehicles listed for online. Same year, same trim, similar mileage — I'm pulling listings that are noticeably higher than what they quoted. They used some third-party valuation tool and won't really explain the methodology.

My dad is the titleholder but he had a stroke last year and has trouble communicating on the phone. He's sharp mentally but the calls wear him out and I genuinely think the adjuster is steamrolling him. I've been trying to step in and handle the back-and-forth but I'm not sure what standing I have to negotiate on his behalf.

They also told us the rental has to be returned by end of this week — but we haven't accepted anything yet. That feels like pressure tactics to force us into taking a lowball number just so we're not stuck without a car.

I have my own separate injury claim with an attorney helping me, but the property damage side is on us to figure out.

Has anyone dealt with disputing a total-loss valuation? Can I formally negotiate for my dad if he gives me written permission or something? And is there any legitimate way to keep the rental going while we push back on the number?

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10 replies

  • 20
    patient-kestrel-981

    I went through almost this exact thing last year. The rental pressure is 100% a tactic — they want you scrambling so you just accept the offer to make the headache stop. When I disputed my valuation I sent a written counter with printed listings attached and gave them a deadline to respond. It bought me time and they actually came up a decent amount. Don't just do it over the phone, put everything in writing.

    • 22
      silent-dove-373

      Former adjuster here. That third-party valuation tool they're using pulls data from a mix of auction results and market listings, but it often underweights your local market and ignores higher-end comparable listings. You have every right to submit your own comparables — find at least 3 to 5 listings within a reasonable radius for the same year, make, trim, and mileage range, and send them over formally. Adjusters are trained to start low and see if you push back. Most people don't. The ones who do almost always get a better number.

      On the rental — once a vehicle is declared a total loss, most policies only cover a set number of days after the offer is made, not after settlement. But if liability is still being actively negotiated, you may have more room than they're letting on. Ask them in writing what specific policy language they're relying on to cut the rental off.

  • 13
    clear-crane-931

    They are absolutely using your dad's situation to their advantage. That's not cynical, that's just how it works — adjusters have call notes and they can tell when someone is easier to push around. Get yourself formally designated to speak on his behalf ASAP, even if it's just a signed letter. And stop doing anything over the phone. Email or letters only from here on out so there's a paper trail.

    • 12
      sharp-hare-349

      Just want to flag — if your dad is post-stroke, the stress of insurance calls can genuinely affect his recovery. Please don't let him keep taking those calls. Getting you formally designated to handle this isn't just a legal strategy, it's the right call for his health too.

  • 12
    curious-newt-894

    The fact that liability is already accepted is genuinely a big deal — a lot of people are stuck fighting that battle for months. You're in a position where it's really just about the number now, and numbers can be negotiated. Hang in there, you're closer to the finish line than it feels.

    • 1
      calm-passenger602

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 10
    careful-seal-049

    For the authorization question — most insurers will accept a simple signed letter from the titleholder (your dad) stating that you're authorized to act on his behalf for the property damage claim. It doesn't have to be notarized in most cases, but calling ahead to ask what format they need is smart so they can't reject it later on a technicality. If his condition is more serious, a limited power of attorney is worth looking into — an estate attorney can often do a simple one pretty quickly and cheaply.

    Also document everything about the car's condition — any recent maintenance records, receipts for new tires or repairs, anything that supports a higher value than their baseline estimate.

  • 10
    bold-fox-738

    Not legal advice, but since you already have an attorney on the injury side, it's worth a quick conversation with them about the property damage piece too. Some PI attorneys will at least point you in the right direction on the total-loss dispute even if it's not their primary focus. The rental cutoff issue and the valuation dispute are both pretty common and they've likely seen it before. Couldn't hurt to ask.

    • 9
      honest-traveler640

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 5
    cool-bison-035

    Don't accept the offer. Seriously, just don't. Once you sign, it's done. The rental pressure is annoying but it's temporary — a bad settlement is permanent. Counter their number in writing with your comps and wait them out.