BaseRaptor
Full Access Member
Bottom line? You walked away from this potentially fatal rollover accident. I would purchase a scratch off lottery ticket today.
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I think it will likely be totaled as well but one thing that has changed in the last few years is that it takes so much more damage to consider a vehicle 'totaled' any more. Seems like it used to be 50-60% damage would total it out, but I just had a car with 72k damage that the insurance company wanted to fix.
Assuming OP is in Florida (Jacksonville) which is a diminished value state, but...
...they're not going to pay out a diminished value claim if the OP was at-fault, which it sounds like he was.
This is interesting, so Collision wouldn't cover it either? Some states have in acted laws to combat unscrouplous insurance companies.
Diminished Value is only applicable if it was not your fault....... Well meaning people here but not informed.Yes, here is some advice. Find out if you are in a diminished value state?
They will leave it in the body shop for 3-5 months fixing all that
The shop and the insurance company will play games until the come to some numbers that make it work for both of their benefits
In simple terms, the F150 is body on frame so it will be off by mm s and possibly more, no frame machine will pull out an f150 railroad rail frame.
My simple advice is don't say a word to you insurance company that you don't want repeated
work a deal up or sell it out right on your own once the work is finished
find another truck to your liking
sue your own insurance company for the diminished value of the truck you just lost then switch insurance companies to someone who protects your assets better. This is the easiest method to make it work out, otherwise you are just SOL.
good luck with it.
Just as an example, when an uninsured idiot rear ended my wife, we couldn’t collect DV from our insurance company. They fixed the car, and that was that.
When an underinsured idiot hit my car, my insurance company fixed my car, and included the DV claim as part of their “bill” to the underinsured guys insurance. My car was fixed completely, and I received a pro-rated portion of the DV claim because we had reached his insurance limits.
On a third occasion, with someone who actually had proper coverage, my insurance fixed my wife’s car, passed the DV claim on to the insurance of the guy who hit her, and it was paid in full.
The key is that there needs to be an at fault third party for your insurance to go after. They could go after the individuals that are uninsured/underinsured, but my experience is that they don’t. They settle for some percentage and write the remainder off.
Your insurance is not going to pay you for diminished value. They will pay the guy that you hit for his DV claim though.