Call or text Attorney Jim Desmond: 502-609-7657

Quick summary: Property-damage claims are mechanical but not simple. The way you handle a totaled car affects not only your immediate pocketbook but also your leverage on the injury claim. Below is what insurers do, common traps, and step-by-step tactics to protect your recovery.


How insurers value cars (the mechanics)

Insurers typically use an automated valuation system that compares:

  • Repair costs
  • Actual Cash Value (ACV) of the vehicle
  • Salvage value
  • Internal rules/thresholds for totaling (commonly a repair-cost percentage of ACV)

When repair costs exceed a set percentage of ACV, the system flags the vehicle as a total loss. Once flagged, insurers move quickly — scheduling salvage pickup (often Copart), generating a valuation report, and closing files. Because of this speed, you must act quickly.


The three biggest ways people lose money on total-loss claims

  1. Accepting the first valuation. Comparable vehicles used by insurers may have higher mileage or be lower trim models; the first number is rarely the top number.
  2. Letting the car go too quickly. Once the car is in salvage, leverage dwindles. Don’t authorize release until you understand the valuation.
  3. Not understanding ACV is negotiable. ACV is a depreciated number and not a fixed legal ceiling. You can (and should) challenge the comps and provide evidence of upgrades and maintenance.

Actionable steps if the insurer says your car is totaled

  1. Do NOT authorize immediate release. Ask for the valuation report.
  2. Check the comparables used by the insurer — mileage, trim, options, and condition must match. If not, push back.
  3. Document upgrades and maintenance (receipts for stereo, tires, recent service, etc.). These increase ACV.
  4. Consider a second estimate from another reputable body shop — but know that getting a shop to tow/estimate may not be reimbursed.
  5. Negotiate the salvage/retention: you may keep the vehicle with a salvage-buyback; understand the buyback math and how it changes the insurer’s payout.

Common misunderstandings & practical tips

  • ACV ≠ replacement cost. Depreciation matters — but ACV is negotiable with good comps and proof of condition/upgrades.
  • Total loss often precedes the injury claim. Don’t give away leverage early by accepting a low total-loss payout before your injury claim develops.
  • The vehicle may end up at Copart/salvage quickly. Remove personal items and verify any salvage process before release.

Who pays for a rental car?

  • If the at-fault driver’s insurer accepts liability and the car is being repaired, the insurer typically pays for a rental while repairs occur (subject to policy limits).
  • If the car is totaled, rental coverage depends on policy terms and whether a comparable replacement is available. Review the policy for loss of use or rental benefits.

When to consider legal help for property damage

I do not take pure property-damage-only cases as a rule (attorney fees often eat the economic recovery). But there are times when a lawyer should step in:

  • Large disparity between your valuation and the insurer’s ACV.
  • Evidence that the insurer used inappropriate comparables or undervalued upgrades.
  • Total loss acceptance that harms your injury claim leverage.
    In those situations, I will advise you and — when appropriate — assist in valuation negotiation or litigation.

Property damage checklist (at the scene and after)

  • Get photos of damage, license plates, and the scene.
  • Save maintenance records and receipts for upgrades.
  • Get the valuation report and list of comparable vehicles.
  • Don’t sign a release or authorize a salvage movement until you understand the numbers.

FAQ — Property damage

What is ACV?
Actual Cash Value is the insurer’s depreciated value of the vehicle — not the replacement cost. It’s often negotiable with better comps and proof of upgrades.

Can I keep my totaled car?
Often, yes — you can buy back salvage, but the insurer will deduct salvage value from your payout. Understand the math before agreeing.

Should I get a second estimate?
You can — but be aware shops may require a tow/estimate fee that the insurer may not reimburse. The second estimate can still be useful in negotiation.


If the insurance company says your car is a total loss, call/text 502-609-7657, and I’ll personally review the valuation and advise whether to push back or negotiate.

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