Is Your Car a Total Loss?

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What is a total loss?

When a vehicle is considered as “a total loss” by insurance companies, do you actually know what they are referring to? This essentially means that the adjuster determined that the cost to repair the damage on your car exceeded what they believe the vehicle is actually “worth” to them, and is thus deemed “a total loss”. The method of determining a total loss actually varies throughout each state. Some states go by the Total Loss Threshold, where damage needs to exceed a particular percentage of the vehicle’s value. For example, Alabama’s TLT is 75 percent. If you were to crash your car valued at $4,000, any amount in damages exceeding $3,000 would qualify as a total loss to your insurance company. Total Loss Thresholds vary throughout each state that use them. Currently, Texas and Colorado have the highest TLT of 100%, while Oklahoma has the lowest of 60%. The other method states use is the Total Loss Formula, where if the sum of the cost of repair plus the salvage value of the car exceeds the car’s ACV, then this is also considered a total loss. 

If for some reason you want to keep your vehicle after it has been determined a total loss by your insurance provider, you are allowed to do so. The question remains is if it’s really worth worth it. Drivers primarily decide to keep a total loss vehicle for the purpose of salvaging it themselves for spare parts, or they believe it can be repaired and returned to safe driving condition. This process is referred to as requesting an owner retained total loss title. Keeping your vehicle may be feasible, but it isn’t always worth it. Factors to keep in mind before requesting an owner retained total loss title are the repair costs, the vehicle passing state inspection, proper insurance coverage, and the vehicle’s financing.

An analysis of recent US total loss rate trends

In recent years, total loss rates have significantly spiked. But why is this happening? Largely due to the remaining number of older vehicle models that remain on US roads. As a vehicle ages, the value naturally depreciates typically leading to total loss share growth. Throughout the last ten years, the demand for used vehicles has remained very high, and in turn diluted total loss thresholds. The first chart below highlights the significant difference in average age between repairable and total loss vehicles.

Average age and condition of total loss carBut it’s not just the age of vehicles that’s causing total losses to increase, it’s the average damage repair costs on the rise too. In 2017, nearly 45 percent of total loss vehicles were between 11 and 16 years old. The average cost to repair them—$9,972. The second chart below demonstrates the positive relationship that has formed between the increase in repair costs leading to an increase in volume of total losses per year since 2009.

Average repair cost of a car after an accidentMoreover, drivers also remain distracted now more than ever. A State Farm survey on distracted driving found that nearly 50 percent of drivers talk on the phone, while 35 percent admitted to texting and driving. Consider this survey’s findings with the fact that Americans on average drive up to nearly an hour per day, and the trending increase of total vehicle losses and road fatalities should no longer come as a surprise. In order to combat these issues, new technologies such as automatic emergency braking (AEB) and forward collision warning (FCW) have emerged and showed great promise already. A 2016 police-reported study conducted in 22 states found that vehicles equipped with FCW reduced rear-end accidents by 22 percent, while vehicles with both AEB and FCW reduced this type of accident by 40 percent. Since this study, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and Insurance Institute for Highway Safety have received commitment from 20 major automakers to make these front crash prevention systems standard in all their vehicles by September 2022. While these vehicle’s safety systems are great, and have yielded a reduction in road fatalities, the key challenge is making sure they’re reliable and expendable. Concern for drivers relying too much on these technologies remains the same, and those vehicles that do get in accidents are surprisingly more likely to be totaled. This is mainly due to the fact that the process of repairing car electronics that have absorbed damage from crashes are virtually useless. In sum, while concern for driver safety remains a top priority, the future of total loss frequency remains in an upward trend.

Nick SullivanIs Your Car a Total Loss?

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