The Shoulder
The Shoulder
52
Property damagebright-marten-390

Insurer took my totaled car AND my signed title — still no payout 3 weeks later. What do I do?

I'm genuinely at a loss here and kind of freaking out so bear with me.

Back in the spring I was rear-ended on the highway — three-car pileup, police came out, the at-fault driver got a citation on the spot. Pretty open-and-shut from what everyone at the scene said, including a guy who pulled over specifically to give a statement to the officer.

Fast forward about six weeks. My car gets declared a total loss. The insurance company and I go back and forth on the valuation (a whole other nightmare), but we finally land on a number I can live with. They tell me to overnight my signed title to them and once they receive it, I'd have my check within a few business days.

I did exactly that. Tracked the package — they signed for it. That was three weeks ago. No check. No direct deposit. Every time I call I get a different rep who tells me it's "in processing" or "escalated to a supervisor" and then nothing happens.

Meanwhile — and this is the part that's making my head spin — the at-fault driver has apparently changed her story. Now she's claiming I caused part of the damage to her vehicle and she's filing some kind of supplemental claim. Her car was a pretty basic older sedan and she's apparently valuing it like it rolled off the lot yesterday.

So to recap: they have my car, they have my signed title, I have no vehicle and no money, and now there's a new claim swirling around that could affect my payout?

How is any of this allowed? Has anyone been in a situation where the insurer basically had everything they needed from you and still stalled? Do I just wait them out or is there a point where I can push back harder?

13replies

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13 replies

  • 18
    careful-raven-180

    This is a classic stall tactic and it works because most people just... wait. They're holding your title, they've accepted delivery, and they're hoping you'll either forget to follow up or get so frustrated you accept less. Document every single call — date, time, rep's name or ID number, exactly what they said. A paper trail matters more than you think when you eventually escalate.

    • 21
      warm-newt-197

      A few things worth knowing — most states have prompt payment laws that require insurers to issue payment within a specific number of days after a claim is settled and documentation is received. Look up your state's insurance commissioner website and find that statute. If they're past the deadline, you can file a complaint with your state's Department of Insurance, and that complaint alone sometimes gets things moving faster than any phone call. Also, the other driver changing her story this late in the process is a credibility issue — especially with a police report and witness statements already in the file.

    • 14
      gentle-finch-497

      This is so stressful to read, I can only imagine how you're feeling. You held up your end of the deal completely and they're just... sitting on it. Please don't let them wear you down into accepting less or just dropping it. You deserve what you agreed to.

    • 7
      gentle-parent345

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 18
    sharp-fox-741

    Not legal advice, but what you're describing — a finalized settlement agreement, title transferred, and no payment — could potentially constitute a breach of that agreement depending on your state's laws. The new claim from the other driver shouldn't be able to unilaterally freeze a payout you've already negotiated. Might be worth a free consultation with a PI attorney just to understand your options. Many will do a quick call at no cost.

    • 4
      plainspoken-mile-marker551

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 18
    candid-hare-156

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me after my accident last year. Different insurer but same runaround — 'it's processing,' 'a supervisor will call you,' nothing. What finally worked for me was sending a formal email saying I was filing a complaint with the state insurance commissioner if I didn't receive a payment confirmation within 48 hours. I had a check number and an EFT scheduled within a day. Sometimes you just have to make noise.

  • 16
    patient-marten-324

    I know this is mostly about the car and money right now, but please don't let the financial stress make you push through any physical symptoms you might be ignoring. Rear-end collisions can cause soft tissue injuries that don't show up until weeks later. If you're feeling any neck stiffness, headaches, or back pain, get it documented with a provider now — not just for your health but because you may need that record.

  • 13
    careful-finch-257

    I used to work on the inside and I'll be honest — once a total loss agreement is signed and the title is received, the payment delay you're describing is NOT normal processing time. Three weeks is way past any standard SLA I ever worked under. That supplemental claim from the other driver is probably being used internally as an excuse to put a hold on your file. It's shady but it happens. You need to send a written demand (email is fine) referencing your agreement date and the title receipt date and explicitly request a payment date in writing. That changes the paper trail in your favor.

    • 5
      mellow-road-soul539

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 12
    curious-wolf-354

    Just want to make sure I understand — did you get the settlement agreement in actual writing, or was it a verbal agreement over the phone? Because the strength of your position depends a lot on whether there's a signed document somewhere confirming the amount and terms. If it was just a verbal 'we agreed on a number,' that's harder to enforce.

    • 6
      hopeful-survivor279

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

  • 12
    sharp-beaver-962

    Stop calling. Start emailing. Every communication from here on out needs to be in writing so there's a timestamp and a record. Call logs are easy to dispute; emails aren't. Also: file the state insurance commissioner complaint today, don't use it as a threat, just do it. It's free, it takes 20 minutes, and insurers respond to those way faster than they respond to angry phone calls.