You didn’t see it coming. The accident happened, your car was towed, and now your insurance company is telling you it’s a total loss — and here’s the check. The number they gave you doesn’t come close to what your vehicle was actually worth. Now you’re staring at a gap between what they’re offering and what you need to replace it.
This situation plays out every day across Louisiana, and most people accept that first offer because they don’t know they have options. You do. Here’s what you need to know — and what you can do about it.
Why Insurance Companies Lowball Total Loss Settlements
When your vehicle is declared a total loss, your insurance company is required to pay you the Actual Cash Value (ACV) of your vehicle — what it was worth on the open market immediately before the accident. The problem is, their valuation tools often undervalue your vehicle. They may use automated database reports that don’t account for regional market conditions, your vehicle’s specific condition, recent comparable sales, or equipment and upgrades you had added to the car.
Insurance companies are also businesses. Their adjusters are trained to settle claims as efficiently — and as inexpensively — as possible. That’s not a conspiracy, it’s just how the system works. And unless you push back with data, most people won’t.
Your Rights Under Louisiana Law
Louisiana law gives you the right to challenge a total loss settlement offer. You are not required to accept the first number your insurer presents. Specifically, you have the right to:
- Request a full explanation of how your vehicle’s ACV was calculated
- Present your own evidence of comparable vehicle sales in your market
- Invoke the appraisal clause in your policy to have an independent appraiser determine the vehicle’s value
That last point — the appraisal clause — is one of the most powerful and underused tools available to Louisiana vehicle owners. Most standard auto insurance policies include a provision that allows either party to demand an independent appraisal when there is a dispute over the value of a loss. Each side selects their own appraiser, and if the two appraisers can’t agree, an umpire is brought in to make a final determination.
Insurance adjusters will sometimes tell you that invoking appraisal is expensive, that the umpire cost alone is prohibitive, or that appraisal almost never results in a higher payout. In our experience, that’s not accurate — and they know it.
A Real Louisiana Example: $15,500 Turned Into $31,700
One of our clients — a Louisiana resident who’d totaled a 2016 RAM 1500 4×4 Laramie — was offered $15,500 by his insurance company. He knew from comparable listings in his area that the offer was far below market. He contacted Collision Safety Consultants, and we opened an appraisal on his behalf.
Ten days later — no umpire required — his insurer settled at $31,700. That’s a $16,200 increase over their initial offer. No lawsuit. No lengthy dispute. Just a well-documented, independently supported vehicle appraisal that reflected what his truck was actually worth.
Here’s how he described it in his own words:
“For the next 2 weeks, I went back and forth with [the] adjuster only getting them to come up to $17,500. I had had enough. I told the adjuster I was invoking appraisal… From signed appraisal agreement to the settlement was 10 days and no umpire was needed. In 10 days my claim was increased $15,000.”
Steps to Take If Your Total Loss Offer Is Too Low
If you’ve received a total loss settlement offer and believe it’s too low, here’s what to do:
- Don’t sign anything yet.
Once you sign a release and accept the settlement, the claim is closed. You typically cannot come back for more money after the fact.
- Research comparable vehicles.
Check AutoTrader, Cars.com, CarGurus, and dealer listings in Louisiana for vehicles of the same year, make, model, mileage, trim, and condition. Document everything.
- Request the insurer’s valuation report.
Your insurance company is required to provide documentation of how they calculated the ACV. Review it carefully. Look for vehicles they’re using as comparables that don’t actually match yours in condition, mileage, or trim level.
- Contact an independent vehicle appraiser.
A licensed, independent vehicle appraiser can prepare a formal ACV report supported by actual market data. This is the document that carries weight when you invoke the appraisal clause or negotiate directly with the insurer.
- Invoke the appraisal clause.
If direct negotiation stalls, formally invoke the appraisal clause in writing. This triggers the structured appraisal process and puts your insurance company on a timeline to respond.
What Collision Safety Consultants Does for You
At Collision Safety Consultants of Southeastern Louisiana, we’ve been doing this work for years. We prepare independent vehicle appraisals backed by real market data — not database estimates — and we’ve consistently helped Louisiana drivers recover thousands more than the insurer’s initial offer.
We offer a free consultation to evaluate whether your situation warrants a formal appraisal. If we don’t believe we can increase your settlement enough to justify the cost of hiring us, we’ll tell you upfront. That’s the only way this works — honestly, on your behalf.
Don’t Accept a Low Total Loss Offer — Call Us First
If your insurance company has declared your vehicle a total loss and the number they’re offering doesn’t feel right, trust that instinct. You have rights in Louisiana, and we can help you use them.
Call us at 504-452-4428 or use the contact form on our website for a free, no-pressure consultation. Let’s take a look at what your vehicle was actually worth — and what you’re owed.