The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insuranceswift-finch-157

Other driver's insurance is pushing a rental on me — can I just take cash for loss of use instead?

Hey everyone, hoping someone here has been through something similar.

About three weeks ago a guy ran a red light and smashed into the side of my car. Totally his fault — police report backs me up, his insurance already accepted liability. My car's been sitting at the body shop ever since waiting on parts.

Here's my issue: his insurance keeps calling me to set up a rental through their preferred vendor. I've used that rental company before and honestly it's a nightmare location for me — no shuttle, weird hours, the whole thing. More importantly, I don't need a rental right now because my partner can drop me off at work. What I actually want is loss-of-use compensation — just pay me for the days my car is out of commission instead of funneling me into their rental program.

Every time I bring it up the adjuster kind of talks around it and steers the conversation back to "just set up the rental and you'll be all set." It feels like they're deliberately avoiding acknowledging that loss of use is even an option.

From what I've read online, as a third-party claimant I should be entitled to loss-of-use damages regardless of whether I actually rent a replacement vehicle. Like, the loss is real even if I find other ways to get around, right?

Has anyone successfully pushed back on this and gotten a daily cash rate instead of being forced into a rental? How did you handle the adjuster? Did you have to get a lawyer involved just to get them to take it seriously?

Any real-world experience here would mean a lot. This whole process is exhausting and I feel like I'm constantly being managed rather than helped.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 21
    tidy-grouse-833

    I used to work claims and honestly? Loss of use without a rental is a totally legitimate demand, it just creates more paperwork on our end so a lot of adjusters default to the rental pitch and hope you go along with it. The thing is, if you push back clearly and consistently, most companies have a process for it. Ask them directly for their loss-of-use daily rate in writing. That's a reasonable request and they know it.

    • 2
      tired-parent663

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

  • 20
    tidy-hare-441

    Quick question — did you actually tell them in clear terms you want loss-of-use cash, or have you just been hinting at it while they keep offering the rental? Sometimes adjusters aren't being sneaky, they're just following a script. Have you flat-out said "I am declining the rental and I want loss-of-use compensation instead"?

    • 6
      honest-rider498

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

    • 7
      thankful-late-shift224

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 14
    clever-wren-809

    Yes, went through almost the exact same thing last year. The adjuster kept acting like a rental was the only option on the table. I finally just put it in writing — sent an email saying I was declining the rental and requesting loss-of-use compensation at a reasonable daily rate instead. Once it was in writing they actually engaged with it. Not saying it'll be smooth sailing but getting it out of verbal-only territory helped me a lot.

    • 9
      careful-neighbor461

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

  • 12
    plain-swift-580

    They do this on purpose. Steering you to their preferred rental vendor costs them less than cutting you a check, so of course that's what they push. The adjuster isn't your friend here — they're trying to close your claim as cheaply as possible. Don't let the "just use the rental" framing trick you into thinking that's your only right. It's not.

    • 17
      brave-crane-285

      You're right on the law generally — loss of use is a recognized damages category in pretty much every state, and you don't have to actually rent a car to claim it. The logic is that you lost the use of your property, full stop. That said, the daily rate they'll offer for straight loss-of-use compensation is often based on what a comparable rental would cost, so do a little research on local rental rates for a similar vehicle so you have a number to reference when you negotiate.

    • 10
      quiet-raven-251

      Stop doing this over the phone. Email only from here on. Every time you talk to the adjuster, follow up with a written summary of what was discussed. Paper trail is everything. And ask them point blank: "Will you provide loss-of-use compensation in lieu of a rental, and if not, please explain why in writing." Watch how fast their answer changes.

  • 12
    genuine-elk-821

    Not legal advice, but this is a really common friction point with third-party claims. You're correct that accepting a rental isn't required to preserve a loss-of-use claim. If the adjuster continues to stonewall you, a quick free consultation with a PI attorney in your state might be worth it — sometimes a single letter from counsel changes the tone of these conversations completely.

    • 8
      tired-driver792

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

  • 10
    bright-crow-180

    Not a claims expert at all but just want to say — the stress of dealing with insurance bureaucracy on top of recovering from an accident is genuinely real and it wears people down. Don't let the exhaustion make you just cave and accept the rental to make it stop. Take care of yourself but don't give up on what you're owed.

    • 1
      calm-neighbor420

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