Matlock owlMatlock
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gentle-bison-474

Insurance totaled my car but I want to keep it — how does the buyback actually work?

Never been in an accident before so bear with me here. Got hit pretty hard from the side a couple weeks ago while I was sitting at a red light. Other driver ran the light. My car is a few years old but I've kept it in great shape — low miles, no prior damage, I genuinely love this thing.

Insurance just sent over paperwork saying it's a total loss. I got an independent shop estimate that's actually less than what they're saying the repair would cost, so I'm confused how that math works. Like if the car can be fixed for less than it's worth… why is it totaled? Something about "total loss threshold" but I don't fully get it.

Anyway — they gave me an ACV (actual cash value) number that I think is a little low for what my car is actually worth in my area. And now I want to know if I can just… keep it. Buy it back from them. Drive it again after repairs.

Questions I can't find straight answers to:

1. If I do a buyback, how much do they typically deduct from the payout? Is it negotiable? 2. Am I stuck with a salvage title forever, or can I eventually get it inspected and converted to a rebuilt title? 3. Can you even get full coverage on a rebuilt title vehicle, or just liability? 4. Is it worth fighting the ACV number before I decide, or should I decide on the buyback first?

I know nobody here is a lawyer or insurance pro, just looking for people who've actually been through this. Every article I find is either AI slop or an ad for some settlement company. Thanks in advance.

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8 replies

  • 18
    genuine-raven-427

    Former adjuster here. The total loss threshold thing confuses everyone. Most states don't require the repair cost to exceed the value — there's often a percentage threshold (like 75-80% of ACV) that triggers a total loss declaration even if it's technically repairable. It's partly about liability — once a car has that level of structural damage the insurer doesn't want to be on the hook if something fails later.

    On the buyback: yes, it's standard, yes it's somewhat negotiable, and yes you will get a salvage title. The rebuilt title path is real but it's a process — usually requires a state inspection after repairs. Coverage options on rebuilt titles are limited depending on your state and carrier, so shop around before you assume you can get comprehensive/collision back on it.

    • 5
      patient-beaver-075

      Hey — just want to check in on YOU, not the car. T-bone impacts can cause soft tissue stuff that doesn't show up until days or even a couple weeks later. If you haven't seen a doctor yet, please go. Even if you feel fine. I've seen people skip it and then have real issues later that are harder to document and treat. Take care of yourself first, the car stuff will sort itself out.

  • 10
    silent-grouse-107

    I went through almost the exact same thing about a year ago. Mine got totaled and I wanted to keep it too. You can absolutely do a buyback — they subtract the 'salvage value' from whatever payout they offer you, and that salvage number is basically what they think they could sell the wreck for at auction. It varies a lot but it's usually a few thousand dollars off. The frustrating part is that number isn't always clearly explained upfront, so you have to ask them directly what the salvage value is before you sign anything.

    • 14
      humble-sparrow-357

      Don't just accept their ACV number without pushing back first. Adjusters lowball that figure pretty routinely. Pull up comparable listings in your area — same year, similar mileage — and send them over in writing. I've seen people get the ACV bumped up just by providing a few comps. Do that negotiation BEFORE you commit to the buyback, because once you accept the offer structure it gets harder to revisit.

  • 11
    brave-vole-958

    Decide what you actually want first. If you love the car and trust the shop, buyback can make sense. If you're on the fence, just take the cash and move on — dealing with a salvage-to-rebuilt process is genuinely a pain and not every shop will work on salvage title vehicles without charging a premium. Know what you're signing up for.

  • 5
    curious-crane-960

    One thing worth knowing — the other driver ran the light, so depending on how fault is assigned, you may have a claim against their liability coverage, not just your own. That's a separate track from the property damage stuff. If you have injuries at all (even minor ones you're brushing off), it might be worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney before everything settles out. Not saying you need one, just saying don't close doors you didn't know were open.

    • 8
      warm-sparrow-472

      What state are you in? The rebuilt title inspection process and what insurers will cover afterward varies pretty significantly by state. Also — did you get a police report at the scene? That's going to matter a lot for the fault determination if this goes further.

  • 6
    mellow-stoat-493

    This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that the other person ran a red light and you're the one doing all this paperwork and research is just infuriating. Hope you're doing okay physically on top of everything.