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quick-crow-202

Insurance towed my car to their lot and now won't let me have it back — can they do that??

So I'm about three weeks into dealing with the aftermath of a pretty bad rear-end collision and I'm honestly losing my mind over something that feels completely insane.

After the crash, the insurance company arranged to have my car towed to some third-party inspection facility they use. Fine, I get it — their adjuster needs to look at it. But here's where it gets maddening: the roof took damage and every time it rains (which has been a lot lately), water is getting inside. The interior is going to be ruined if this drags on much longer.

I called the adjuster and asked if I could just arrange to bring the car to my own driveway while we're still negotiating the payout. I even said I'd pay for the tow myself — not asking them for anything. She basically told me no, that's not happening until we settle on a number. Then she had the nerve to suggest that if I care so much about the car, I should just accept their current offer, keep the vehicle, and tow it myself.

Their offer is way below what I think is fair, so I'm not ready to accept it just to get my own property back.

Here's my question: it's still MY car, right? I never signed anything giving them ownership or control of it. They don't get to just hold it indefinitely while we argue over money, do they? This feels like straight-up leverage tactics and it's making me furious.

Has anyone else dealt with this? What did you do? I really don't want to accept a lowball settlement just because they're essentially holding my car hostage.

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8 replies

  • 16
    kind-tern-793

    This happened to me almost exactly! I was so frustrated I ended up just showing up at the facility with a tow truck and asked them directly. They hemmed and hawed but ultimately couldn't point to anything that said I couldn't take my own car. The insurance company was annoyed but there was nothing they could do. YMMV but it's worth knowing you might have more power here than the adjuster is letting on.

  • 15
    curious-marten-045

    Ugh, I'm so sorry. The fact that they basically told you to take their lowball offer or your car keeps sitting there in the rain is just gross. That's not negotiating in good faith, that's bullying. I really hope you find a way to get your car back without caving to their number. You deserve better than this.

  • 12
    sharp-crane-107

    Oh wow, this is a classic pressure move. They know the longer that car sits and deteriorates, the more desperate you'll get to settle fast. Don't fall for it. Document every single rainstorm, take timestamped photos of any new interior water damage, and keep a written log of every time you called and what they said. That paper trail matters if this escalates.

    • 5
      careful-stoat-547

      A few practical things that can help here: first, check whether the storage facility is charging daily fees — that bill can quietly balloon and sometimes gets used as further leverage against you at settlement. Second, send your adjuster a written communication (email over phone, always) citing the ongoing interior damage from rain exposure and stating clearly that you hold the insurance company responsible for any additional deterioration that occurs while they are controlling access to your vehicle. That kind of language tends to get people's attention.

  • 5
    mellow-elk-456

    I used to work on the other side of these claims and I'll be honest with you — what you're describing is a negotiating tactic, plain and simple. The facility holding your car is almost certainly contracted through the insurer, and there's no legal reason they can prevent you from retrieving your own vehicle. The adjuster is banking on you not knowing that. I'd send a written request — email is fine — explicitly stating you want your car released to you at your expense before any settlement is finalized. Put it in writing so there's a record.

    • 8
      hearty-stoat-388

      Not legal advice, but generally speaking: the insurance company doesn't gain ownership of your vehicle just by inspecting it or having it towed. You typically retain the right to your property throughout the claims process unless you've signed something transferring title (like accepting a total loss settlement). If they're refusing to release it, that could actually work in your favor legally. Might be worth a free consultation with a PI attorney just to understand your options — this situation is worth at least a quick conversation.

    • 2
      quick-wolf-695

      Stop negotiating over the phone. Everything in writing from here on out. Email only. Also — have you gotten your own independent appraisal of the car's value? Because if you're just countering their number with vibes, that's not going to move them. Get an actual written appraisal from a reputable source and use that as your anchor.

    • 11
      quick-marten-634

      This might be a bit off-topic but — are you doing okay otherwise? I ask because the stress of fighting insurance on top of recovering from a crash is genuinely rough on your body. I've seen patients in similar situations run themselves ragged dealing with the claim stuff and then wonder why they're not healing. Just make sure you're taking care of yourself too, not just the car situation.