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silent-fox-711

Got into a second accident before settling DV claim from the first — am I screwed?

So here's my situation and I'm honestly stressed about it. Back in the spring I was rear-ended at a stoplight — totally not my fault, the other driver admitted it on scene and everything. Their insurance accepted liability pretty quickly and got my car repaired, but I hadn't yet pursued the diminished value side of things. I was taking my time, getting my ducks in a row.

Then about six weeks later I clipped a concrete barrier in a parking garage. Completely my fault, no question. The damage was pretty minor — scraped up the front bumper and passenger side panel — and I just paid out of pocket to avoid messing with my own insurance.

Now I'm sitting here wondering: does that second incident kill my diminished value claim from the first accident?

My car was in genuinely great shape before the rear-end — low miles, clean history, always garaged. That original collision was significant enough that the repair bill was pretty hefty. A car with that kind of repair history loses real market value, and I feel like I deserve to be compensated for that by the at-fault driver's insurance.

But now there's this second incident on the record, even though I fixed it and it was minor. Will the adjuster use that against me to lowball or deny the DV claim entirely? Like can they say "well the car has other damage history now so we don't owe you anything"?

Has anyone been through something like this? Did you still manage to recover diminished value after a second incident complicated things? Really appreciate any insight.

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8 replies

  • 16
    clear-finch-037

    The legal theory behind diminished value is that the at-fault party is responsible for the loss in market value their negligence caused. A subsequent unrelated incident doesn't retroactively eliminate the loss that already occurred from the first accident. What matters is whether you can clearly separate the two. Keep the repair invoices from the second incident, make sure it shows up as a distinct event on the vehicle history, and consider getting a certified appraisal that attributes the DV specifically to the first collision's repair history. That paper trail is everything.

  • 14
    plain-tern-045

    Not legal advice, but this is a pretty common issue and it doesn't automatically torpedo your claim. Courts and insurers generally recognize that subsequent events don't erase prior liability — the question is causation and documentation. A qualified DV appraiser can write a report isolating the value impact of just the first repair. If the other insurer pushes back hard, having an attorney review the claim is worth it, especially since most PI attorneys will look at a DV situation for free.

    • 14
      cool-raven-846

      Get a diminished value appraisal done now — like this week. Don't wait any longer. Every month that passes gives the other side more room to argue the timeline. Find a certified auto appraiser who does DV specifically, pay the fee (usually pretty reasonable), and get a written report. That report becomes your anchor for the whole claim. Everything else is just noise.

  • 13
    tidy-marten-509

    I actually had almost this exact thing happen to me. I was waiting on a DV claim and then fender-bendered someone in a parking lot before I settled. What I learned is that the DV from the first accident is still a separate claim — the at-fault driver's insurance can't just wipe it away because something else happened later. The key is documenting that the second repair was completed and the damage was unrelated. I ended up getting a independent appraisal that specifically broke down the value loss attributable only to the first accident. It took longer but it worked out.

    • 10
      clever-kestrel-823

      Oh they will absolutely try to use that second incident as a weapon. Adjusters love anything that muddies the water — they'll conflate the two events, claim they can't isolate the value loss, and use it as an excuse to drag their feet or lowball you. Don't let them. The burden should be on them to prove the second incident affected your DV, not on you to prove it didn't. Stay firm and document everything about that second repair — receipts, photos, the works.

  • 10
    careful-marmot-373

    Quick question — did you actually get the second repair done at a shop with documentation, or was it more of an informal fix? Because if there's no paper trail on that second incident it could actually make things messier, not cleaner. The vehicle history report might show an inquiry or a claim even if you paid out of pocket, and if you can't produce repair records to match, an adjuster could claim there's unresolved damage. Just want to make sure your bases are covered before you push forward.

  • 9
    tidy-badger-418

    Honestly, from the inside, what we'd look at is the vehicle history report and the repair records for both incidents. If your second repair is documented as fully resolved and the damage was genuinely minor and unrelated to the first collision, a fair adjuster would still calculate DV based on the first accident's repair record. That said, some adjusters will use any excuse to reduce the payout. The strongest thing you can do is get a third-party diminished value appraisal — a professional one, not just an online calculator. It's harder to argue with an independent expert's report than with your word alone.

  • 6
    clever-marmot-293

    Not my area professionally but I went through a DV claim after my own accident and the thing nobody tells you is how exhausting the back-and-forth is. Just make sure you're not letting the stress of this drag on your recovery from the first accident too. Sometimes people hyperfocus on the car stuff and don't realize the physical and mental toll is still adding up. Take care of yourself while you're fighting this — both things matter.