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Should I submit an insurance claim or just take the loss?

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Hunterman

Junior Member
Minnesota

I bought a used 2007 Hyundai Tucson yesterday for $3,000. I put full-coverage on the car yesterday afternoon. There is a $500 deductible. Last night my 18 year-old daughter, who has only had her license for one week, hit a cement pole in a parking lot. She was alone and not injured.

The hood and front bumper were damaged and the radiator was ruined. The vehicle still runs fine and the lights work fine. I was able to drive it to a body shop and it ran fine on the way there even though the radiator dripped the entire time. I explained at the body shop that I didn't really care how it looked, I just wanted it to run. Meanwhile, I called the insurance company and was told I should probably get an estimate before submitting a claim. They explained that with a new driver on the account and with an at-fault accident on a vehicle just added to the account my rate was going to go way, way up, possibly 3 or 4 times what it had been. I was told that if the estimate wasn't too high then I would be quite a bit better off in the long run paying for getting it fixed than I would be by submitting a claim.

Then the body shop called and said that there were bent parts that needed to be replaced and they were already at $1,800 dollars just for parts and that didn't even include the cost of a hood or the labor. They recommended not getting it fixed and just totaling the vehicle.

So now I have a choice, do I submit a claim and have my rate increase greatly or do I just take the $3,000 loss?

Any advice would be appreciated. Thank you.
 


Taxing Matters

Overtaxed Member
I don't know what your current rates are, what they'd be after submitting the claim, or how long that increased rate would last (though it would be at least two years). Get that information and then run the numbers. Whichever option works out to less money is probably what you should do. This isn't really a legal question.

I would also guess that the daughter needs some more driving training.
 

Just Blue

Senior Member
Hey Hunterman, This is off topic but I was just reading through your thread regarding the divorce and was wondering if the ex ever got sober?
 

adjusterjack

Senior Member
So now I have a choice, do I submit a claim and have my rate increase greatly or do I just take the $3,000 loss?
With a new driver and an at-fault accident your premium could double or triple. As painful as it seems, I would take the loss and not file the claim.

Call some wrecking yards and see what they'll give you for it. Or advertise on Craigslist as a parts car and see what you can get to mitigate the loss.

Make sure the shop isn't going to charge you for storage. Ask, don't assume.

If this is any consolation be thankful it was a daughter and not a son. A young male new driver would have already cost you twice as much for insurance.
 

Hunterman

Junior Member
Hey Hunterman, This is off topic but I was just reading through your thread regarding the divorce and was wondering if the ex ever got sober?
Great question. The divorce was final in September, 2019 and she got married two weeks later to a man 27 years older than her. He was 81 when they got married. He is set for life so she doesn't have to work and from what I have heard she pretty much drinks non-stop all day every day. If anything, the drinking is worse than ever and it was really bad before.
 

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