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keen-newt-597

Insurance lowballed my totaled truck — they won't take dealer listings seriously. Anyone fight this?

So my truck got totaled about three weeks ago when someone ran a red light and T-boned me. Thankfully I walked away with just some bruising, but the truck is completely gone. Not my fault — there's a police report and a witness — but the at-fault driver's insurance is still dragging their feet on liability, so for now my own collision coverage is handling the total loss side.

Here's where I'm frustrated: their valuation tool spat out a number that feels way off. I've been shopping around online just to reality-check it, and I found three trucks within about 150 miles of me — same year, same trim, similar mileage — all listed at dealerships for noticeably more than what they're offering me. We're talking a meaningful gap, not just a couple hundred bucks.

I screenshotted everything and sent it over. The adjuster basically dismissed it and said retail dealer listings don't reflect "actual market value" by their standards, and that their third-party valuation tool is what they go by. She mentioned I could hire an independent appraiser if I disagreed.

I have a few questions for anyone who's been through this:

  • Is it normal for insurers to just ignore dealer comps like that?
  • Has anyone actually pushed back and gotten a better number without going the formal appraiser route?
  • What evidence actually moved the needle for you?
  • Is an independent appraiser worth it, or does the cost eat up whatever you'd gain?

I really don't want to just roll over and accept a number that doesn't let me replace what I lost. Any advice appreciated.

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9 replies

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    warm-marten-707

    I went through almost the exact same thing last year. They lowballed me and dismissed every listing I sent. What finally helped me was calling the adjuster's supervisor directly and calmly walking through each comp one by one — not emailing, actually calling. Got a bump, not huge, but better than nothing. Don't give up after one "no."

    • 0
      quick-badger-198

      Honestly? Get the valuation report, find every comp they used that's wrong — wrong trim, higher mileage, different region — and dispute those specifically in writing. That's more effective than sending listings they'll just ignore. Make them defend their own math.

  • 0
    daring-lynx-902

    Former adjuster here. Those third-party valuation tools (you'll see names like CCC or Mitchell floating around) are pretty much gospel internally — adjusters rarely have much wiggle room to deviate from them on their own. That said, they're not infallible. If you can show the tool used comparable vehicles that don't actually match your trim level or condition, that's your real lever. Dealer listings alone won't move them, but pointing out flawed comps within their own report sometimes does. Ask for the full valuation report in writing — you're usually entitled to it.

  • 0
    sharp-vole-004

    They always say dealer listings don't count. Funny how that argument only ever goes one direction, right? If dealer prices were lower than their offer, you can bet they'd cite them. Don't let them frame the rules of the game entirely in their favor.

  • 0
    quiet-mole-977

    A few practical things worth knowing: most states require insurers to provide you a copy of the valuation report they used — request it in writing if you haven't already. Also check whether your policy has an appraisal clause; many do, and it sets up a formal process where both sides bring an appraiser and a neutral umpire decides. It's not free, but it's more structured than just going back and forth with the adjuster. Not legal advice, just stuff worth looking into.

  • 0
    bright-dove-924

    Don't forget to also keep documenting your physical symptoms even if you think you're "just bruised." T-bone impacts can cause soft tissue stuff that shows up days or weeks later. I know you asked about the truck value, but please don't sign anything broadly releasing claims until you're sure you're actually okay.

  • 0
    hearty-wolf-985

    Not legal advice, but worth knowing: if the gap between their offer and fair market value is significant, a PI attorney who handles property damage disputes might at least give you a free consult to tell you if it's worth pursuing. Some work on contingency even for total loss disputes depending on the state. The appraisal clause route your adjuster mentioned can also be legitimate — just make sure you understand who pays the appraiser fees before you go that route.

    • 0
      clever-hare-849

      Quick question — were the dealer listings you found certified pre-owned or just standard used inventory? And did the mileage and trim actually match, or were you comparing a base trim to your higher trim? I've seen people get tripped up on that. Not saying you're wrong, just making sure your comps are airtight before you go to battle.

  • 0
    gentle-fox-306

    The fact that you're already doing research and pushing back puts you way ahead of most people in this situation. A lot of folks just accept the first number. Keep going — even a partial win here matters.