The Shoulder
The Shoulder
66
daring-elk-405

Rear-ended someone on the highway — airbags deployed, steam coming out. Is it done for?

So this happened two days ago and I'm still shaking a little writing this out. I was on the interstate doing highway speed when traffic just stopped out of nowhere — like a wall. I hit the brakes as hard as I could but there was no way I was stopping in time. Slammed into the SUV ahead of me.

Airbags went off. My whole hood crumpled up like an accordion. When I finally got out I could see steam or coolant vapor rising from the front of the engine bay. The car drove onto the shoulder but barely — it was making a horrible grinding noise and pulling hard to the right.

At the scene the other driver seemed okay, we exchanged info, cops came and did a report. I went to urgent care the next day because my chest and neck were killing me (seatbelt bruising they said, and possible whiplash — still waiting on imaging results).

My insurance adjuster is coming out to look at the car Thursday. Here's what I'm wondering:

  • If the airbags deployed AND there's coolant damage, does that basically guarantee a total loss?
  • Is it worth getting an independent estimate before the adjuster shows up?
  • What happens if I disagree with their valuation of my car?

I've never been through anything like this. The car wasn't brand new but it was in really good shape and I still owed money on it. I'm worried the payout won't even cover what I owe on the loan. Has anyone dealt with this before?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 12
    humble-elk-736

    Ugh, I went through almost the exact same thing last year. Airbags deployed in my accident and yeah — it was totaled. Airbag replacement alone is insanely expensive, and when you add frame or cooling system damage on top of it, the repair cost almost always exceeds what the car is worth. Doesn't mean you're out of options though, keep reading the other replies here.

    • 5
      level-overpass564

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 23
    steady-seal-960

    Former auto adjuster here. Airbag deployment is a huge factor in total-loss decisions but it's not automatic — it depends on the car's actual cash value versus estimated repair cost. That said, if you've got coolant system damage and deployed bags and possible frame issues from the hood crumpling, that math usually tips toward total pretty fast.

    Also — and this is important — if you still owe money on the car, ask your lender right now whether you have GAP coverage on your loan. If the payout comes in less than your loan balance, GAP is the only thing that saves you from still owing money on a car you no longer have.

  • 7
    candid-sparrow-235

    Please, please get your own independent appraisal before you accept anything the adjuster tells you. Their job is to close your claim efficiently, not to maximize your payout. I'm not saying they're all dishonest, but the initial offer is almost never the best offer. You have the right to dispute their valuation.

    • 20
      daring-dove-325

      A couple of things worth knowing: most states have a total-loss threshold — usually somewhere around 70-80% of the vehicle's actual cash value — where the insurer is required to call it a total loss. You can look up your state's threshold online.

      Also, document everything about your car's pre-accident condition. Recent maintenance records, new tires, any upgrades — all of that can be used to argue for a higher valuation. Take screenshots of comparable listings in your area for the same year/make/model/mileage too. Adjusters use comps, so bring your own.

    • 0
      soft-spoken-backseat375

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 10
    curious-bison-987

    Please don't ignore the whiplash symptoms while you're stressed about the car. Soft tissue injuries from rear-end collisions can feel manageable for a few days and then get significantly worse around day 4-7 as inflammation builds. Make sure you follow up on those imaging results and keep a journal of your symptoms — pain levels, sleep disruption, anything. That record matters for your health and potentially for any injury claim.

    • 4
      tired-neighbor417

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

  • 4
    calm-swift-567

    I'm so sorry you're going through this. It sounds genuinely terrifying and the aftermath is so overwhelming. Are you doing okay otherwise? Do you have someone helping you navigate all of this?

  • 14
    brave-otter-283

    Short answers: yes it's probably totaled, yes get an independent estimate, and yes you can negotiate the valuation — don't just roll over and accept the first number. Also talk to a personal injury attorney about the neck and chest stuff before you sign anything releasing the other party. Most of them do free consults and it costs you nothing to get informed.

  • 14
    careful-mole-982

    Quick question — who was actually at fault here? Did the sudden stop happen because of a chain-reaction situation, like someone further up caused it? That could matter a lot for how liability gets sorted. If someone else triggered the whole thing, there might be more parties involved than just you and the SUV you hit.

    • 5
      quiet-wanderer806

      How long did it end up taking in your case?