The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Two not-my-fault accidents, two separate DV claims possible? Feeling totally lost

So I've had a rough couple of years with my car and I'm just now learning that diminished value (DV) is even a thing you can claim. Really wish I'd known sooner.

First accident happened about 18 months ago — someone clipped my driver's side door in a grocery store parking lot while I was inside shopping. Their fault, their insurance paid for the repair. I didn't think twice about DV at the time.

Then just last month, I get rear-ended at a red light. Again, not my fault, and now I'm dealing with another insurance claim. The damage this time is to the rear bumper and trunk area — totally different part of the car than the first hit.

Here's where I'm spinning out:

1. Can I still go back and file a DV claim for that first accident even though it happened over a year ago and the car was already repaired? 2. Should I wait to repair the new damage before filing anything, or does it not matter since they're separate parts of the car? 3. Does having two accidents on my vehicle's history hurt the DV claim for either one, or do they kind of compound each other?

The car is only about two years old and I'm the original owner — bought it brand new. No structural/frame damage in either incident, just body panel stuff. But I know Carfax shows both incidents now and that can't be good for resale.

I'm not trying to be greedy, I just don't want to leave money on the table that I'm actually entitled to. Has anyone navigated something like this? What did you do?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 17
    warm-wren-048

    Honestly the fact that you caught this now, before fully settling the second claim, puts you in a better spot than a lot of people. Most folks don't find out about DV until everything's closed and it's too late to reopen. You still have leverage on at least the current claim — use it.

    • 3
      calm-neighbor772

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

  • 14
    keen-badger-483

    Ugh, I feel this so hard. I found out about DV like eight months after my accident was all settled and repaired. I actually went back and filed anyway — the statute of limitations in my state gave me time. Got a small payout but it was something. Definitely worth looking into whether you're still within the window for that first claim.

    • 5
      spry-dove-152

      Whatever you do, don't let the adjuster for the second accident tell you the first accident 'already reduced the value so there's nothing left to claim.' That's a tactic. Each accident caused its own separate hit to the vehicle's history and market value. They are two distinct events with two potentially responsible parties. Don't let them bundle it into one lowball number.

    • 7
      wise-grouse-353

      Quick question — do you actually have documentation from the first accident? Like the original repair order, photos, the claim number? Because going back 18 months and trying to prove the value impact without solid records is going to be an uphill battle. What does your paperwork situation look like?

  • 14
    brave-elk-509

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the interplay between two separate DV claims on the same vehicle is genuinely tricky and fact-specific. Whether you're still within the filing window for the first claim depends entirely on your state. And how courts or adjusters treat compounding value loss from two incidents varies a lot. This is honestly one of those situations where a quick consult with a PI attorney — many do free ones — could save you from making a misstep. At minimum it'd give you a clearer picture of what you're actually entitled to.

  • 13
    spry-vole-035

    Not my area but I just want to check — were you in the car when the rear-end happened? Sometimes people get so focused on the car damage that they downplay any physical symptoms. Even low-speed rear impacts can cause delayed neck or back pain that shows up days later. Make sure you're documenting anything physical too, just in case.

    • 0
      curious-wanderer369

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 11
    genuine-swan-887

    A few practical things worth knowing: DV claims are typically filed against the at-fault party's liability insurance, not your own. Since both accidents had other at-fault drivers, you'd be looking at two separate claims with two separate insurers. The statute of limitations clock starts from the date of each accident, so check your state's rules — some are two years, some three. The repair for the first accident being complete shouldn't necessarily bar a DV claim, but the longer you wait, the harder it gets to document the value loss. For the second claim, it probably doesn't hurt to let repairs happen — DV is about market value loss, not about the damage itself being visible.

    • 14
      steady-finch-382

      Get an independent DV appraisal done for each accident separately. Like, hire your own appraiser, not a guy the insurance company recommends. It costs a few hundred bucks but gives you a real number to negotiate from instead of just accepting whatever they offer. Don't skip this step.

    • 5
      curious-commuter119

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 7
    humble-otter-131

    Okay so from my time on the inside — DV claims on cars with multiple accident entries get complicated fast, and adjusters know this. They'll try to argue that the second accident 'absorbed' some of the value loss from the first, or vice versa. It's not necessarily true, but it's a common move. You'd really benefit from getting an independent appraisal that specifically breaks down the value impact of each incident separately. That documentation makes it much harder for them to lowball you.