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Distracted driver totaled my custom camper van — insurance lowballing me bad. What do I do?

So this happened about three weeks ago and I'm still fuming.

I had my camper van parked on the street in front of my brother's house — completely legal, totally stationary. Some guy ran a red light while messing with his phone (he literally told the officer he was skipping a song) and slammed into it at what witnesses said was a pretty high speed. The van got pushed up onto the curb. Frame is bent, rear axle is cracked, body damage is severe. My mechanic friend looked at it and basically said it's a parts car now.

Here's the thing — this wasn't just some beater van. I spent two years slowly converting it. Custom sleeping platform, insulated walls, a small solar setup, ventilation fan, the whole deal. I used it constantly — weekend trips, hauling gear for my side gig doing outdoor events, lending it to family during moves. It was genuinely useful and it was mine in a way a normal car isn't.

The at-fault driver is insured under his parents' policy (he's in his early 20s, their vehicle). Their insurer called it a total loss pretty fast, which, fine, I get it. But the payout they're quoting me feels like it's based on some stripped-down base model van — not what I actually had. They're not factoring in the conversion work at all as far as I can tell.

They also offered me a rental. It's a mid-size sedan. Cool, I guess, but it doesn't help me haul anything or do what I actually need to do.

Do I have any recourse here? Can I fight the valuation? Can I go after the driver or his parents directly? I feel like I'm about to get completely steamrolled and I don't know where to start.

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9 replies

  • 15
    wise-finch-348

    I'm so sorry, this is just awful. You did everything right — parked legally, maintained your vehicle — and some guy on his phone gets to walk away while you're stuck fighting an insurance company for what you're actually owed. That's infuriating. I really hope you get a fair outcome. Please don't let them pressure you into settling fast.

  • 14
    plain-crane-884

    So from the inside perspective — when a vehicle has significant aftermarket modifications or custom work, adjusters often just don't know how to value it correctly, or they default to base model comps because it's easier. It's not always malicious, but the result is the same: you get less than you're owed.

    You have every right to submit a counter-valuation. Get three or more comparable listings — similar vans with similar conversion features — and submit them in writing. Ask them in writing to explain exactly what comparables they used. That paper trail matters if this escalates.

  • 8
    hearty-seal-401

    Were you in the van or nearby when it got hit? Even if you weren't physically injured, stress and loss of something you put real time and love into is genuinely hard. Make sure you're taking care of yourself through this — the financial fight is real but so is the emotional toll of losing something meaningful.

  • 4
    sharp-raven-660

    Ugh, I went through almost this exact thing with a modified truck. The insurer valued it like it was stock and completely ignored the aftermarket work. What I learned the hard way: you need to document everything about those custom additions — receipts, photos, any appraisals, even old social media posts showing the build. The more paper trail you have proving what the van actually was, the harder it is for them to lowball you. Start pulling that together right now if you haven't.

    • 11
      brave-sparrow-645

      Genuine question — do you have any documentation of the conversion work? Receipts, build logs, photos with timestamps, anything? Because 'I built it out over two years' and 'here are $4,000 in receipts for materials and components' are very different conversations with an insurer. If you've got the documentation you're in a much stronger position than you might think. If you don't, that's the first problem to solve.

  • 4
    wise-heron-384

    Three things: (1) Don't sign anything or accept any payment yet. Once you cash that check you may be done. (2) Get an independent appraisal of the van's pre-accident value from someone who knows custom builds. (3) Document every single expense you've had since the accident — rental costs, anything you couldn't haul, any jobs you turned down. Build the full picture of what this actually cost you.

  • 3
    steady-marmot-389

    Do not accept their first offer. Please. That number is not their best number — it's their opening move. Adjusters are literally evaluated on how much they save the company. The 'total loss valuation' they're using is probably based on a database search of comparable listings that conveniently ignores your custom build-out. You are allowed to dispute it and provide your own comparable sales data.

    • 6
      sharp-fox-946

      A few things worth knowing: (1) In most states, if the insurer totals the vehicle, you can negotiate the ACV (actual cash value) — it's not a take-it-or-leave-it number. (2) The conversion components may need to be itemized separately in your claim. (3) Since the driver was operating a vehicle owned by someone else, the owner can potentially have liability exposure too, depending on your state's laws around permissive use. Might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options — not saying sue anyone, just know where you stand.

    • 15
      sharp-elk-512

      Not legal advice, but generally speaking: custom vehicle modifications can be compensable if you can document their value. The challenge is proving it. An independent appraisal of the van before the accident — even reconstructed from receipts and photos — can support a higher valuation claim. If negotiations stall, a demand letter from an attorney often moves things. Many PI attorneys take these cases on contingency so there's no upfront cost to you.