The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
Property damagepatient-mole-328

Totaled my first car 4 days after buying it — completely falling apart rn

I still can't believe this is real. I saved up forever, finally bought my first car completely on my own — title in my name, insurance in my name, the whole thing. I was so proud. Four days later it's gone.

I was driving on a rural road I've taken a hundred times. Hit a slick patch coming out of a curve, overcorrected, and went into a guardrail. Airbags deployed. My buddy in the passenger seat got a nasty gash near his eye from the bag — we both walked away but we're banged up. I keep replaying it over and over.

Now I'm dealing with all of this at once and I genuinely don't know where to start:

1. The loan gap situation — I put a solid chunk down but I still owe more than what I'm guessing the payout will be. Is that just... my problem now? Do I keep paying a loan on a car that's crushed?

2. Rental coverage — My policy has a daily rental cap and a total max. The dealership I'm looking at has nothing in that price range. Am I just eating the difference out of pocket every day?

3. My passenger's injury — He's being super cool about it and says he's fine, but that cut looked bad and he hasn't seen a doctor. Should I be worried about this becoming a bigger issue for me later?

4. My rates — I'm young, this was already expensive. Is my insurance basically going to be unaffordable after this?

I feel like an absolute idiot and I can't stop apologizing to everyone. Just looking for anyone who's been through something like this and can tell me it eventually makes sense.

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12 replies

  • 11
    plain-kestrel-482

    Oh man, this hit me hard to read. I totaled my first financed car about two years ago — different circumstances but that same gut-punch feeling of 'this can't be real.' The loan gap thing is brutal and real. I ended up owing a few thousand after the insurance payout and had no gap coverage. Learned that lesson the hard way. Check your paperwork — some dealerships roll gap coverage in and don't really explain it. Worth a look before you assume the worst.

  • 18
    clear-lynx-928

    Please please please do not just accept whatever number the adjuster throws at you for the car's value. They will pull comps that favor them. You have the right to dispute the valuation — find your own comparable listings, document them, and push back. Adjusters are not your friend in this process, even if they sound sympathetic on the phone.

    • 11
      mellow-finch-436

      I want to flag something — both you and your passenger took airbag deployment. That is a significant physical event even if you feel okay right now. Soft tissue injuries, concussion symptoms, and even internal bruising can show up 24-72 hours later. Please get checked out, and strongly encourage your passenger to do the same. I've seen people feel 'fine' and then wake up two days later unable to turn their neck. Don't tough this one out.

  • 10
    spry-kestrel-865

    Former adjuster here. A few things: the rental cap is what it is — if the cheapest available car runs over your daily limit you will pay the difference, but call your insurer and ask if they have preferred vendors because sometimes they have negotiated rates that stretch your coverage further than you'd expect.

    On the loan gap — if you don't have gap insurance, yes, you're responsible for the difference between the ACV payout and the remaining loan balance. That's the short answer. Call your lender immediately so you're not accruing weirdness on a totaled vehicle.

    Also: document every single out-of-pocket expense starting now. Rental receipts, Ubers, anything.

  • 9
    keen-stoat-955

    About your passenger — I'd be proactive here rather than reactive. Since you were driving, your liability coverage would typically be what covers his injuries if he decides to make a claim. The fact that he's being easygoing right now is great, but injuries can surprise people, and medical bills have a way of changing conversations. You don't need to have an awkward talk with him, just make sure your insurer knows there was an injured passenger. Let them handle it. That's literally what the liability portion of your policy exists for.

    • 8
      kind-passenger704

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 19
    warm-beaver-511

    The guilt is real and I get it, but please be kind to yourself. Accidents happen to careful people all the time. The financial stuff is fixable — it's stressful and it'll take time but it's fixable. Just focus on one thing at a time and don't try to solve everything in the next 48 hours.

    • 8
      calm-traveler323

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 19
    careful-grouse-842

    Three calls you need to make today if you haven't already: your insurance company to open the claim, your lender to tell them the car is totaled, and your state's DMV line to ask about title/total loss paperwork. Don't sit on any of these — delays just create more headaches. Everything else can wait a day or two.

  • 8
    plain-beaver-421

    Not legal advice, but the passenger injury piece is worth taking seriously from a liability standpoint. Even if he says he's fine, if he later seeks medical treatment and connects it to this accident, a claim could come your way. Your insurer needs to know about this now — not later. Also worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your exposure. Most do free initial calls.

    • 6
      calm-commuter719

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

  • 16
    tidy-crane-266

    You both walked away. I know that probably sounds hollow right now with everything you're dealing with, but a guardrail impact with airbag deployment can go very differently. The car is a thing. You have time to recover from the financial side of this.