The Shoulder
The Shoulder
66
Property damagesilent-dove-180

Truck has $40k+ in repairs and they're offering peanuts for diminished value — is this normal??

Still kind of in shock over this whole situation so bear with me.

My husband bought a brand new pickup about two months ago — we're talking under 2,500 miles on it. He was sitting at a red light when someone blew through a stop sign and slammed into the passenger side. Major damage. We're talking the kind where the tow truck driver actually whistled when he saw it.

The repair estimate came back at over $40,000. The truck is technically "repairable" so they didn't total it, which I guess I understand, but now the other driver's insurance is offering us what feels like an insult for diminished value — basically saying the truck lost almost nothing in resale worth despite being a brand new vehicle that's now had a massive collision repair on its record.

I've done some reading and I know diminished value is a real, legitimate claim — especially on a nearly-new vehicle. A truck with a $40k repair on its Carfax is NOT worth the same as one with a clean history. Any dealer I talk to would tell you that.

Has anyone been through this? How do you fight back on a lowball DV offer? Do you need an independent appraiser? An attorney? I feel like we're just supposed to accept whatever number they throw at us and move on, and that feels completely wrong.

Any advice from people who've actually dealt with this would mean a lot right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 22
    plain-stoat-339

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll be honest with you — the formula most carriers use for diminished value was literally designed to minimize payouts. It caps percentages in ways that just don't reflect real-world resale impact, especially on newer vehicles with low mileage. A truck that young with a major repair on the history report loses significant market value. Their number almost certainly doesn't reflect that. Push back hard and get that independent appraisal.

    • 17
      brave-fox-205

      A few things worth knowing: First, document everything — the repair invoices, photos before and after, any dealer or trade-in assessments showing the vehicle's reduced value. Second, your state's rules around diminished value claims vary, so it's worth a quick look into what's allowed where you are. Third, if you send a formal written dispute to the insurer with your independent appraisal attached, they're usually required to respond in writing, which creates a paper trail if things escalate.

  • 17
    daring-badger-312

    Quick question — is the claim going through your own insurance or the at-fault driver's carrier? That actually matters for how the DV claim works procedurally. Also, did the repair shop give you any kind of written assessment about the impact on resale value, or just the repair estimate itself?

  • 13
    clever-badger-963

    The fact that you caught this and are asking questions instead of just cashing their check puts you way ahead of most people. A lot of folks don't even know diminished value is a thing they can claim. You clearly do your homework — that's going to make a real difference in how this ends up.

    • 10
      honest-rider306

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

  • 10
    brave-sparrow-811

    That low DV offer is not an accident — it's a tactic. Insurers use their own in-house formula that almost always spits out the lowest possible number, and they're counting on you not knowing any better. Don't treat their first offer as a starting point for negotiation, treat it as a opening lowball. Because that's exactly what it is.

    • 17
      quiet-stoat-017

      I'm so sorry this is happening to you on top of everything else. The accident itself is stressful enough without having to fight for a fair payout on a brand new vehicle. Sending you both some patience because it sounds like this process is going to take some time. You're absolutely right to push back though — trust your gut on this one.

  • 8
    steady-tern-211

    We went through almost the exact same thing last year — nearly new SUV, big repair, insulting DV offer. What actually moved the needle for us was getting an independent diminished value appraisal from a certified auto appraiser. It costs a couple hundred bucks but gives you a legit third-party number to counter with instead of just arguing against their formula. Do not skip that step.

    • 15
      gentle-swift-602

      Not legal advice, but diminished value claims on nearly-new vehicles are genuinely worth pursuing, and the gap between what insurers offer and what you can actually recover with proper documentation can be substantial. An independent appraiser's report changes the conversation entirely — it gives you something concrete. If the gap is big enough, a PI attorney who handles property damage claims might be worth a consult. Many will at least talk to you for free.

    • 7
      grounded-offramp571

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

  • 5
    humble-finch-166

    Get the independent appraisal. Counter in writing. If they still lowball you, talk to a lawyer. That's the whole playbook. Don't waste energy being outraged at them — they're doing exactly what they're trained to do. Your job is to make it more expensive for them to lowball you than to pay fairly.