The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagebold-sparrow-180

Looked up my old car for fun and found out it got totaled after I sold it — is that normal?

So this is kind of a weird one and I'm not even sure why I'm posting but I need someone to help me process this.

I sold my old SUV about two years ago — a car I genuinely loved and kept in perfect condition for almost a decade. Last week I was bored and ran the VIN through one of those vehicle history lookup sites just out of curiosity, honestly half expecting to see it living its best life with a new owner.

Instead I found a salvage title flag. Totaled. The record shows it happened sometime in the past year.

I know logically it has nothing to do with me anymore. I signed it over, it's not my problem, not my insurance, not my anything. But I felt this bizarre gut-punch when I saw it. Like hearing an old friend got hurt.

A few questions spinning in my head:

  • Is it common for vehicle history sites to show how it was totaled, or just that it was?
  • Does a salvage flag always mean a serious crash, or could it be something like flood damage or a fire?
  • Is there any way to find out more about what actually happened to it?

I realize this is a weird thing to be emotionally invested in. My partner thinks I'm being ridiculous lol. But I spent so many years with that car and I guess I'm just curious. Has anyone else gone down this rabbit hole and found something unexpected?

Thanks for humoring me 😅

11replies

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11 replies

  • 22
    candid-owl-807

    From my time in the industry — a salvage title just means the insurance company determined repair costs exceeded a certain percentage of the vehicle's market value at the time. That threshold varies by state, so sometimes cars get totaled that aren't as destroyed as you'd imagine. It's possible it was a moderate collision that just wasn't worth fixing economically. Doesn't necessarily mean it was mangled.

    • 7
      weathered-road-soul495

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

  • 15
    genuine-fox-928

    Which history site are you using? Some of the free or cheaper ones pull incomplete data and mislabel things. A salvage flag without a detailed incident report could mean anything. I'd run it through a more comprehensive paid service before reading too much into it.

  • 14
    silent-marmot-821

    Aw, I totally get it. It's like finding out something happened to a place you used to live. Irrational but completely human. Hope you can get some closure on what actually happened!

    • 4
      kind-survivor871

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 12
    humble-swan-959

    Honestly this doesn't sound ridiculous at all to me. I looked up a motorcycle I sold a few years back and found out it had been in a pretty bad collision. Felt genuinely sad even though it had nothing to do with me anymore. You get attached to a vehicle, especially one you kept for years. Totally valid feeling.

  • 12
    spry-crane-969

    Hey, look at it this way — you sold it when it was in great shape, got whatever you got for it, and moved on. Whatever happened after is on the universe, not you. You gave that car a good life! 😄

    • 1
      hopeful-optimist799

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 9
    warm-otter-797

    Salvage titles come from a few different things — crash damage, flood, fire, even hail in bad enough cases. The history report should have a damage category listed somewhere. Look for terms like 'collision,' 'flood,' or 'comprehensive loss' — that'll at least narrow it down for you.

  • 9
    mellow-seal-933

    If you're really curious about the details, some states make accident reports public record. If you know the approximate date range and the county where the new owner registered it, you might be able to submit a public records request for any crash reports tied to that VIN. It's a bit of a process but totally doable if you want answers.

    • 2
      honest-passenger791

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.