The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Insurancekeen-swan-125

Insurance wants to total my truck but their comps are trash — can I fight back?

So my truck got hit about three weeks ago when someone ran a red light and slammed into my driver's side door. Thankfully I walked away, but my truck did not. The other driver's insurance declared it a total loss pretty quickly, which honestly I expected — the frame damage alone was brutal.

Here's where I'm getting frustrated. They sent over their "comparable vehicles" they used to calculate what my truck is worth, and I'm looking at these things like… are you serious?

  • One has almost 40,000 fewer miles than mine and they actually adjusted down for it (makes no sense)
  • Two of the comps are a completely different trim level — higher end, more features, different packages
  • One of them is from a dealership three states away

My truck had a specific tow package and some aftermarket upgrades I added within the last year — bed liner, toolbox, running boards. Nothing crazy but all documented with receipts. They're not accounting for any of it.

I called the adjuster and pushed back, and she basically said their third-party valuation tool found these comps automatically and that's just "how the process works." Like I'm supposed to accept a computer's output without question.

I went and found four listings myself — same year, same trim, similar mileage — from dealers within maybe 30 miles of me. Sent them over. Now I'm being told their evaluator "reviewed and rejected" my comps without any real explanation.

Can they just do that? Do I have any actual recourse here, or am I stuck taking whatever number they decide on? Has anyone successfully pushed back on a total loss valuation and actually gotten a better offer?

13replies

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

13 replies

  • 20
    bright-tern-236

    I went through almost this exact thing last year. Their first offer was laughably low and when I sent my own comps they brushed them off too. What finally moved the needle for me was writing a formal dispute letter — not just a phone call — and attaching every listing with the VIN, mileage, and asking price clearly highlighted. Suddenly the number went up. Don't just argue verbally, put everything in writing.

    • 0
      hopeful-parent417

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

  • 19
    hearty-swan-162

    That "the tool found it automatically" line is such a dodge. These third-party valuation platforms are often calibrated in ways that benefit the insurer. The adjuster isn't lying exactly, but she's also not going out of her way to get you a fair number. You have to push hard and document everything. They're counting on you getting tired and just accepting it.

    • 6
      gentle-passenger636

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 8
    bright-kestrel-889

    Okay so I used to work on the claims side and here's the reality: those automated valuation tools do pull comps based on geographic radius, and adjusters often have limited authority to override the system output. BUT — and this is important — most policies have a formal appraisal or dispute process built right into them. Pull out your actual policy document and look for words like "appraisal clause" or "dispute resolution." If it's in there, you can invoke it and get an independent appraiser involved. That changes the dynamic completely.

    • 14
      careful-grouse-886

      Not legal advice, but — the insurer does have some discretion in how they calculate ACV (actual cash value), but that discretion isn't unlimited. If you believe the valuation methodology is flawed or that they're lowballing you in bad faith, there are options beyond just arguing with the adjuster. At minimum, get the dispute process started formally and stop relying on phone conversations. Depending on your state, there may be bad faith statutes that put real teeth into these disputes.

    • 19
      steady-crow-261

      Three things: 1) Stop doing everything by phone — email only from here forward so you have records. 2) File a complaint with your state's department of insurance. It costs you nothing and insurers take those seriously. 3) Talk to a PI attorney — many do free consults on exactly this kind of situation and they know how to make insurers move faster than you can on your own.

  • 21
    cool-swan-356

    A few things worth knowing: First, your state's department of insurance probably has guidelines on what counts as a valid comparable vehicle — look that up because it may actually define mileage range, trim equivalency, and geographic limits. Second, aftermarket additions can be factored in but you typically need receipts and sometimes photos. Third, their rejection of your comps should come with a reason — if they're not giving you one in writing, ask for it in writing. Paper trail is everything in these disputes.

  • 6
    swift-mole-898

    Slightly off the vehicle topic but — how are you doing physically? You said you walked away but a side-impact at an intersection can do sneaky things to your neck and back that don't show up until days or even weeks later. If anything feels off, please get checked out and make sure it's documented. Don't let the property damage fight distract you from your own health.

  • 14
    spry-hare-031

    Quick question — are you filing through your own insurance or going directly through the at-fault driver's carrier? That changes things a bit. If it's through yours, your insurer is actually obligated to advocate for you to some degree. If it's the other driver's insurance, you're essentially negotiating with an adversary from the start and have less leverage inside their process. Which is it?

  • 13
    curious-crane-264

    I know this process is exhausting but the fact that you're already gathering your own comps and pushing back means you're way ahead of most people. A lot of folks just sign whatever they're handed. The people who dispute usually do get more — it just takes persistence. Keep going.

    • 6
      quiet-passenger466

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

    • 4
      thankful-road-soul664

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