The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Lender slapped force-placed insurance on my car right before the crash — what now?

So this is a weird situation and I can't find much info about it online so hoping someone here has been through something similar.

About six weeks before my accident, I let my personal auto policy lapse — money was really tight and I kept meaning to sort it out. My lender apparently noticed and put what I later found out is called "force-placed" or "collateral protection" insurance on the vehicle. I didn't even fully understand what that meant until after the crash happened.

Now I've been rear-ended pretty badly on the highway — other driver was 100% at fault, no dispute there — and my car is totaled. The force-placed policy is through my lender and from what I can tell it's mainly designed to protect them, not me personally.

Here's where I'm confused:

  • The payout seems to be going toward my remaining loan balance, which is fine, but what about what the car was actually worth above that?
  • Do I have any personal injury claim through this policy or is that just not a thing with force-placed coverage?
  • The at-fault driver's liability insurance is also in the picture — does that change anything?

I've got some soft tissue stuff going on with my neck and back that I'm getting checked out. Not trying to be greedy, just want to understand what I'm actually entitled to here vs. what the lender is entitled to.

Anyone dealt with force-placed insurance after a totaled car? What was your experience getting anything back for yourself vs. the loan payoff?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 16
    warm-finch-347

    Oh man, I was in almost this exact situation a couple years ago. The short version: the force-placed policy basically zeroed out my loan, but yeah, anything beyond that for me personally was basically nothing from that policy. The real money for my injuries ended up coming from the at-fault driver's liability coverage. That's where I'd focus your energy honestly.

    • 15
      wise-kestrel-474

      Please don't let the at-fault driver's insurer know you had a lapse in coverage if you can avoid it. They will absolutely try to use that against you somehow — imply you were doing something sketchy, muddy the waters, whatever. Just answer what they directly ask and don't volunteer extra info.

    • 2
      steady-parent244

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

  • 12
    clear-crow-528

    So force-placed policies are written to protect the lienholder — full stop. The lender is the named insured, not you. What that typically means in a total loss is they get made whole on the loan balance and you get... the math. If the car's actual cash value was higher than what you owed, there can be leftover proceeds, but in my experience that rarely gets proactively handed to the borrower. You usually have to ask, loudly and in writing.

    The good news in your situation is the at-fault driver's liability coverage exists separately and that's where your personal injury and any gap in vehicle value should come from. Don't let the force-placed insurance situation distract you from pursuing that lane aggressively.

    • 9
      careful-parent298

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 8
    wise-marmot-776

    To answer your specific questions: force-placed policies generally don't include liability or medical payments coverage for you as the driver/borrower — that's just not what they're built for. Your personal injury claim would come from the at-fault driver's bodily injury liability coverage, not your lender's policy at all. Those are two completely separate tracks. On the vehicle side, if the ACV exceeds your payoff amount, you're theoretically owed the difference but you'll likely need to push for it. Get the total loss valuation in writing.

    • 15
      steady-hare-755

      Not legal advice, but the at-fault driver's liability policy is really the key piece here for your personal injury and any vehicle value beyond your loan payoff. The force-placed coverage is essentially the lender's product for the lender's benefit. Given that you have injury symptoms and a clear liability situation, this is genuinely worth a consultation with a PI attorney — most do free consults and work on contingency so there's no upfront cost to you.

    • 4
      calm-survivor870

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 6
    hearty-crow-184

    Whatever you do, please don't brush off the neck and back stuff. Soft tissue injuries from rear-end collisions can feel manageable for the first week or two and then really catch up with you. Get imaging done, follow through on any treatment they recommend, and keep every single receipt and record. That paper trail matters a lot if you end up with an injury claim down the road.

  • 14
    careful-vole-830

    Hey, at least the loan getting wiped out is one less stressor, right? And having a clearly at-fault driver with insurance actually puts you in a decent position compared to a lot of people on here dealing with uninsured drivers. It's messy but it's workable.

  • 14
    careful-elk-782

    Three things: 1) Get all your medical stuff documented starting now, don't wait. 2) Request the total loss valuation report from the lender in writing so you know exactly what the car was valued at vs. your payoff. 3) Open a claim with the at-fault driver's insurance for your injuries separately — that's your money, not the lender's. Stop overthinking the force-placed stuff, it'll handle itself. Focus on the injury claim.