The Shoulder
The Shoulder
68
plain-mole-158

Just bought my first car, other driver ran a red, now I'm drowning — do I take the lowball offer?

I genuinely don't know where to turn so I'm posting here hoping someone's been through something similar.

About six weeks ago I finally saved up enough to buy my first real car — nothing fancy, just reliable. Put basically everything I had into the down payment and drove it off the lot feeling like I'd actually accomplished something for once. Three weeks later some guy blows through a red light and T-bones me. Car is totaled. His fault, 100%, police report confirms it.

His insurance has been 'investigating' forever and finally came back with an offer that would barely cover two months of my car payment, let alone everything else I've lost:

  • The car itself (still owe more than what they're offering)
  • My down payment — basically my entire savings, gone
  • Lost wages — I had to miss almost two weeks of work because I couldn't get around and my job isn't remote
  • Rental car costs — I've been paying out of pocket and it adds up fast
  • Medical stuff — my neck and shoulder are still messed up and I have a follow-up appointment next week

The adjuster keeps calling and now she's hinting that the offer 'won't be on the table much longer.' I have rent due in less than a week and I'm genuinely scared. Part of me wants to just take the money and survive the month, but something feels really wrong about signing anything right now.

Has anyone been pressured like this? Did you sign early and regret it? Or am I overthinking it and should just take what I can get?

Any perspective helps. I'm losing sleep over this.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 19
    cool-wren-811

    This is so stressful and I'm sorry you're going through it. Is there any way to borrow from family or a friend just to get through rent this month while you figure out the claim? I know that's awkward but it might buy you enough time to not make a rushed decision you can't undo.

  • 16
    warm-swift-185

    Don't sign. Full stop. I know rent is terrifying but signing that release is a one-way door. Figure out rent another way — payment plan with your landlord, ask family, whatever it takes. Settlements can sometimes take time but they can also be a lot more than that first number. The first offer is basically always lowball.

    • 6
      tired-optimist963

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

  • 15
    clear-dove-261

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: a signed release of claims is almost always final and binding. The fact that you have ongoing medical issues is particularly important — you generally cannot reopen a claim for injuries that develop or worsen after you settle. At minimum, consult with a personal injury attorney before signing anything. Most work on contingency so there's no upfront cost to just talking to one.

  • 14
    genuine-marmot-624

    Please don't minimize the neck and shoulder stuff. I've seen so many people settle fast, then find out weeks later they have a disc issue or soft tissue damage that needs real treatment. That follow-up appointment next week could change everything. You don't always know the full picture right away, and medical bills can spiral. Get that appointment done before you make any financial decisions if you can.

    • 2
      quiet-wanderer476

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 12
    swift-owl-927

    I don't want to be harsh but I'm curious — did you have gap insurance on the loan? And what does your own insurance policy say about any of this? Sometimes people's own uninsured/underinsured coverage or collision coverage can kick in faster than waiting on the at-fault driver's carrier. Might be worth a call to your own insurer to see what your options are while you wait this out.

    • 0
      patient-survivor123

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 8
    keen-wolf-274

    That 'offer won't last' line is a classic pressure tactic — please don't fall for it. Adjusters are trained to create urgency so you settle before you know the full extent of your losses, especially medical ones. Your neck and shoulder issues alone could cost way more than you think if they don't heal cleanly. Once you sign a release, that's it. You can't go back.

    • 1
      curious-commuter134

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 5
    plain-heron-498

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest with you — when I said something like 'the offer won't be on the table much longer,' I was bluffing almost every time. The file doesn't close that fast. What they're counting on is exactly what you're feeling right now: financial panic. The first offer is almost never the best offer, and they know it.

    • 17
      mellow-crow-507

      I was in almost the exact same spot — new car, wiped out savings, adjuster breathing down my neck while my rent clock was ticking. I ended up talking to a PI attorney before doing anything. A lot of them do free consultations and don't charge unless you win. Wish I'd done that from day one instead of panicking and signing too early. Seriously, just make one call before you decide anything.

    • 10
      sharp-heron-538

      A couple of things worth knowing: first, you should be entitled to a rental reimbursement from his insurance, not just out of pocket — if they haven't set that up yet, push back on that immediately. Second, if you still have an outstanding loan on the totaled car, gap coverage (if you have it) or negotiating the actual cash value matters a lot. And third — do not sign any 'full and final release' until you've at least talked to someone who can review it. That language is permanent.

    • 4
      steady-survivor817

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