The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
Property damagebrave-lynx-578

Insurance wants to repair my car but it feels like it should be totaled — how do I know?

So I got rear-ended pretty hard at a stoplight about two weeks ago. The other driver was 100% at fault — police report confirms it. My car is drivable technically, but here's what's going on with it:

  • Trunk won't latch properly, has to be bungee-corded shut
  • Backup camera is completely dead
  • There's a warning on my dash about the rear collision sensors being offline
  • The rear bumper is visibly crumpled and one tail light housing is cracked

The other driver's insurance sent out an adjuster who looked at it for maybe 15 minutes and came back with a repair estimate. The number they're offering feels low to me but honestly I don't even know what the car is worth or what "totaled" actually means legally.

My bigger concern is this: even if they fix the cosmetic stuff, what about the sensor systems? Those aren't cheap to calibrate or replace and I don't fully trust that a body shop is going to make sure everything is working the way it was before the crash.

Also — I've been having neck stiffness and headaches since the accident. Went to urgent care once but haven't followed up yet because I've been so focused on the car situation.

Do I push back on their repair estimate? Do I get my own independent appraisal? And should I be handling the car stuff separately from the injury stuff or does it all go together in one claim?

Feel like I'm completely in the dark here and the adjuster is not exactly being forthcoming.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 19
    plain-seal-389

    I went through almost exactly this last year. The other driver's insurance lowballed my repair estimate and I just accepted it — huge mistake. The shop found more hidden damage once they started pulling panels and I ended up having to fight for a supplement. Get your own independent estimate from a shop you choose, not one the insurance company steers you toward.

    • 12
      cool-vole-839

      Former adjuster here. That 15-minute inspection is pretty standard but it doesn't mean they caught everything. Sensor recalibration costs are real and adjusters sometimes underestimate them on the first pass. If the repair estimate doesn't specifically line-item the ADAS calibration (that's the fancy term for your backup camera and collision sensor systems), push back and ask them to add it. Also — get that supplement process started before you authorize any repairs, because once the car's in the shop it gets messier.

    • 4
      weary-rider351

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

    • 3
      grounded-backseat751

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 8
    brave-marten-699

    They are NOT on your side. Their job is to close your claim as cheaply and quickly as possible. That adjuster wasn't there to help you — they were there to protect their company's bottom line. Please do not sign anything or accept any payment until you at least talk to someone who's actually looking out for you.

  • 15
    brave-elk-087

    Just so you know, the bodily injury part of your claim and the property damage part are technically separate coverages, but they're usually handled together under one claim number. That said, you don't have to settle them at the same time. A lot of people settle the car quickly and then wait until they know the full picture of their injuries before resolving the injury side. Don't let them pressure you into a global settlement before you know how your neck and headaches shake out.

    • 4
      mellow-mile-marker905

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

    • 5
      hopeful-walker649

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

  • 21
    tidy-mole-844

    Please follow up on those symptoms. Neck stiffness and headaches after a rear-end collision can be whiplash, and whiplash doesn't always hit its peak until a few days after the crash — sometimes longer. If you wait too long to establish ongoing care, it can look like the injury wasn't serious, which hurts you later. Go see your primary care doctor or an urgent care and tell them it's accident-related. Get it documented.

  • 14
    wise-crow-418

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the threshold for "totaled" varies by state — it's usually when repair costs hit a certain percentage of the car's actual cash value (ACV). If you want to know whether you're close to that line, you can look up your car's value on a few independent sources and compare it to the repair estimate. If repairs are anywhere near 70-80% of what the car's worth, it might be worth pushing the total loss conversation. The sensor damage you're describing can add up fast.

  • 12
    clear-raven-128

    Two things you should do right now: (1) Get your own repair estimate from a reputable independent shop before agreeing to anything. (2) Go back to the doctor and get your symptoms properly documented. Everything else can wait a little, but those two things are time-sensitive.

    • 0
      curious-rider291

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 7
    bright-crow-603

    I know it feels overwhelming, but you're actually in a decent position — you have a clear police report showing fault, you went to urgent care (so there's a medical record), and you haven't signed anything yet. You still have options. A lot of people come here after they've already made mistakes. You haven't.