The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagesharp-wolf-007

Just replaced my transmission — now totaled. Insurance barely added anything for it. Normal??

Hey everyone, first time posting here and honestly just feeling really frustrated and confused.

About six weeks ago I dropped over $2,000 getting my transmission fully rebuilt at a shop I've used for years — they do great work and gave me a 2-year warranty on the parts and labor. I was finally feeling good about the car again after putting that money into it.

Then last month someone blew a red light and slammed into me. Their fault, their insurance accepted liability, no dispute there. My car got totaled.

So now I'm in the total loss settlement phase and I submitted the receipt for the transmission work thinking it would meaningfully bump up my payout. The adjuster came back and said it only added a couple hundred bucks to their valuation. On a $2,000+ repair I just made less than two months ago.

I genuinely don't understand how that math works. The car is more valuable with a freshly rebuilt transmission than without one, right? It's not like the transmission wore out again in six weeks.

I asked the adjuster to explain the methodology and got a pretty vague answer about "market conditions" and "depreciation schedules." Okay... but depreciation over six weeks?

Has anyone else dealt with this? Is this just how total loss valuations work, or is the insurance company low-balling me? Can I push back, and if so, how? I really can't afford to just eat that loss on top of everything else going on.

Any insight appreciated — even just knowing I'm not alone in this would help.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 16
    tidy-elk-564

    Oh man, this is almost exactly what happened to me. I'd put new brakes and rotors on my car like a month before it got totaled and the adjuster basically waved it off like it didn't matter. I was furious. You are absolutely not alone in this.

    • 12
      patient-marmot-130

      A few practical things worth knowing: (1) you have the right to dispute a total loss valuation in most states — it's not take-it-or-leave-it, (2) you can submit your own comparable listings to counter their comps, and (3) if there's a big enough gap, some people hire an independent appraiser. That costs money upfront but can close the gap significantly. Also keep copies of everything — the receipt, the warranty documentation, any communication with the adjuster.

    • 20
      gentle-dove-306

      What's the overall offer they gave you relative to what the car was worth before the repair? Like, is it in the ballpark of fair market value minus the transmission credit, or are they low on the base number too? Sometimes the fight is really about the base valuation, not just the repair add-on.

    • 4
      gentle-driver612

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 13
    curious-heron-709

    Don't accept the first offer. That's basically rule one. Go find 3-5 comparable vehicles for sale in your region with similar mileage and condition, screenshot the listings, and send them to the adjuster. Make them justify why their number is lower. It's tedious but it works.

  • 12
    sharp-vole-230

    Not legal advice, but this is one of the more common total loss disputes I hear about. The short version: insurers are required to pay you the actual cash value of the vehicle, and a documented major repair that recent absolutely factors into that. Whether they're calculating it correctly is a different question. If the gap between their offer and what you think is fair is significant, it might be worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney who handles property damage — some will take a look at the valuation dispute specifically.

    • 2
      hopeful-rider201

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

  • 11
    calm-kestrel-971

    "Market conditions" and "depreciation schedules" — classic adjuster deflection. They say that hoping you'll just accept the number and go away. Don't. Request everything in writing and ask them to show you the actual comps they used to arrive at that figure. If the comparable vehicles they're using don't have recent major mechanical work documented, the comparison isn't apples to apples.

    • 3
      calm-survivor774

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

  • 9
    clever-owl-257

    So here's the inside scoop — the way most carriers calculate total loss value, recent repairs only get factored in partially because they use third-party valuation tools (CCC, Mitchell, etc.) that pull comparable sales in your area. Those tools aren't great at capturing the actual cost of recent mechanical work. The adjuster isn't necessarily lying to you, but the system is definitely not designed to make you whole on recent out-of-pocket repairs. The good news: you can dispute the valuation. Ask them specifically which tool they used and request the full comparable vehicle report. That's your starting point for pushing back.

  • 9
    swift-beaver-522

    For what it's worth — the fact that you have a receipt and a warranty document actually puts you in a stronger position than most people. A lot of folks get work done and don't keep the paperwork. You have proof. Use it.

    • 0
      gentle-passenger576

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