The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
Property damagequick-swan-357

Just dropped my EV off for damage inspection after a side hit — total loss or repairable?

So I'm sitting here anxious and honestly a little lost. Got hit pretty hard on the passenger side about two weeks ago — some guy ran a red light and T-boned me. My car is only about 8 months old, barely any miles on it, and it's fully electric.

The impact was really concentrated around the rear passenger wheel well. Like, the whole panel in that area is caved inward. Visually it looks "localized" if that makes sense, but I've been reading enough online to know that with EVs the battery pack runs under the floor and a side hit in that zone can mean way more damage than what you see on the surface.

I just handed it over to the insurance-approved shop this morning for their inspection and I feel weirdly helpless. A few things I'm genuinely unsure about:

  • Is an EV more likely to get totaled after this kind of impact compared to a gas car? I've heard repair costs are just way higher.
  • What if they only see surface damage but there's something wrong with the battery or the structural frame underneath? Do shops actually dig that deep on the first look?
  • If they do call it a total loss, does being a newer vehicle with low mileage work in my favor for the payout?

I'm not trying to get rich here, I just want to be made whole. I loved that car and I'm still making payments on it. The other driver's insurance accepted liability pretty quickly which I guess is good, but now I'm just waiting and feeling like I have zero control over what happens next.

Has anyone been through something similar with a newer EV? What should I be pushing for or watching out for?

10replies

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10 replies

  • 18
    gentle-beaver-055

    Don't wait for them to come to you. Call the shop every couple of days and ask for a status update. Ask specifically if they've assessed the undercarriage and battery housing. Squeaky wheel gets the grease — adjusters and shops are juggling dozens of files and yours will move faster if you're politely persistent.

  • 18
    plain-elk-044

    I know it feels awful right now but the liability acceptance is genuinely a big deal — a lot of people spend weeks just fighting that part. You're already past the hardest hurdle. The car stuff is annoying and stressful but it's solvable. Hang in there.

  • 17
    patient-vole-427

    Not legal advice, but — if the at-fault driver's insurer accepted liability, that's a meaningful step. Your leverage increases if they total it, because you're entitled to the vehicle's actual market value, not what's convenient for them. If repair is the path and you end up with a car that has a salvage or rebuilt title later, that diminished value is also potentially recoverable. Worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney before you sign off on anything.

    • 5
      kind-wanderer902

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 13
    silent-dove-537

    How are YOU doing, physically? A T-bone at any speed can rattle you in ways that don't show up immediately. Soft tissue stuff, neck, even mild concussion symptoms can lag by days. Please don't let the car stress overshadow checking in with a doctor if anything feels off. I see people dismiss symptoms and then struggle to connect them to the accident weeks later.

    • 9
      curious-driver245

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 11
    steady-dove-758

    A couple of things worth knowing: first, "total loss" is calculated differently by state — it's usually triggered when repair cost hits a certain percentage of the vehicle's actual cash value (ACV). Second, low mileage and age absolutely factor into ACV, so document everything — original purchase price, any upgrades, your mileage records. If they lowball the ACV, you can dispute it with comparables (similar year/trim/mileage listings in your area). That's a pretty standard negotiation and you don't need a lawyer to do the first round of it.

  • 7
    clear-badger-785

    I went through almost this exact thing last year with a newer hybrid — not fully electric but close enough that the repair costs were wild. The shop initially said it was repairable, then three weeks later called back and said once they got into the frame and the undercarriage they were flipping it to a total loss. Just be mentally prepared for that pivot. It was actually a relief in the end because I got a fair payout rather than a patched-together car I'd never fully trust again.

    • 18
      steady-seal-005

      Watch out for the "repairable" call when it really should be totaled. Insurers sometimes push repair over total loss because it's cheaper for them short-term, even if the car will never be structurally right again. An EV with potential battery damage is not something you want half-fixed. If anything feels off about their assessment, you absolutely have the right to get an independent appraisal.

    • 15
      clever-stoat-459

      From my time on the inside — with EVs, a lot of adjusters are honestly still catching up. Battery diagnostics aren't always part of the standard damage workflow unless someone specifically flags it. I'd strongly recommend you or your own rep ask in writing that the shop run a full battery system diagnostic before any repair estimate is finalized. Get that in writing. If they skip it and something shows up later, you want a paper trail showing you asked.