The Shoulder
The Shoulder
66
Property damagequiet-wren-492

Rear-ended my 3-month-old truck and insurance wants to repair it — should I push for a total loss?

I'm still kind of in shock about this whole situation and need some outside perspective.

Back in early spring I bought a brand-new pickup — had maybe 1,800 miles on it, still had that new-truck smell. Last week some guy blew through a red light at what witnesses said was close to highway speed and absolutely slammed into my rear end while I was sitting still waiting to turn. His car was destroyed. Mine is still drivable, but the rear end looks rough.

Insurance sent an adjuster out who looked at it for maybe 20 minutes and said it's "repairable." But when I talked to the body shop, even they seemed hesitant — they mentioned the rear frame rails took the hit and there's some structural deformation behind the rear axle. The adjuster is acting like that's totally fine to weld and patch.

Here's what's eating at me:

  • This truck had zero prior damage. The structural integrity was factory-perfect.
  • The crumple zones in the rear did their job... which means they're used up now, right?
  • My insurance seems annoyed every time I ask follow-up questions, like I'm being difficult

I genuinely don't know if I'm overreacting or if this is a real concern. Should I be demanding an independent appraisal? Is there such a thing as a "diminished value" claim for a truck this new? I feel like once frame damage is on the Carfax, this vehicle loses serious resale value even if it drives perfectly.

Has anyone else fought their insurance company on something like this? How did you approach it without them just stonewalling you?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 9
    swift-bison-455

    I went through almost exactly this two years ago — newer SUV, rear structural damage, insurance wanted to repair it. I pushed back hard and eventually got an independent appraisal done. The appraiser found damage the original adjuster completely missed. Definitely don't just accept their first assessment, especially on a truck that new.

    • 14
      calm-heron-938

      Okay so I used to work on the claims side and I'll be honest with you — adjusters have file quotas and repair is almost always cheaper on paper than totaling. That doesn't mean repair is the right call. Frame rail deformation on a truck that new is not nothing. You are absolutely within your rights to request a second inspection. Ask specifically for the repair estimate to include a post-repair structural scan. If they balk at that, that tells you something.

    • 7
      kind-badger-828

      Not legal advice, but diminished value claims are very real and often overlooked. In most states, when a newer vehicle sustains structural damage, you can pursue the difference between what it would have been worth undamaged versus post-repair. It's a separate claim from the repair itself. Worth at least asking about — not something insurers will volunteer to explain to you.

    • 16
      candid-crane-302

      Are you doing okay physically? People sometimes get so focused on the vehicle damage — totally understandably — that they downplay what happened to their body. A rear impact at that speed even without visible injury can cause soft tissue stuff that shows up days or weeks later. Please get checked out if you haven't.

    • 3
      quiet-neighbor490

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

  • 12
    cool-hare-622

    "Your insurance seems annoyed every time I ask follow-up questions" — yeah, that's a red flag to me. They work for themselves, not you. The second you start costing them more money than they budgeted for your claim, you become a problem. Don't let them guilt you into dropping it. Keep every email, write down every call with date and time.

  • 17
    plain-crow-093

    Get an independent appraisal. Today. Stop waiting for your insurance company to do the right thing on their own. It'll cost you a few hundred bucks but it could be the difference between a patched truck with frame damage on its record and a proper settlement.

  • 6
    swift-swan-170

    Few questions before jumping to conclusions: Did the body shop give you anything in writing about the frame rail deformation, or was that just verbal? And what does your policy actually say about structural repairs? Sometimes people assume "frame damage = total loss" but the threshold is more complicated than that depending on your state and policy language.

    • 6
      patient-wanderer462

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 15
    wise-wren-275

    The fact that you're asking these questions early is actually a big deal. A lot of people just sign off on the first offer and regret it later. You're already ahead of the curve by pushing back now rather than after the repair is done and you notice something feels off.

  • 8
    curious-owl-845

    I can hear how stressed you are and honestly this situation sounds so frustrating. You did nothing wrong and now you're the one fighting to get made whole. That's just not fair. Hang in there and don't let them wear you down.