The value or worth of something is based on what someone will pay for that item. So what is your question?
When shopping for a new vehicle (or selling one), it is important to shop around and get a good idea how much a particular vehicle is worth.
The simple answer is that it is worth what you can get for it. Depending on the following items and more: your location, miles on the vehicle, condition of the vehicle, equipment on the vehicle. It also depends on: whether you are trading the vehicle to a dealer, selling it to another party yourself or the price a dealer puts on the window when selling. Several websites attempt to address this type of question. One reliable source is Kelly Blue Book (kbb.com).
Only if the vehicle was worth very little. Most vehicles are customarily valuable enough (in dollars and cents) to cross the threshhold into the felony classification.
Then you should sell the vehicle. If you cannot arrange a private party sale for the vehicle, you may want to consider selling it for scrap metal (contact local scrap and junk yards to see what price you can get for it).
I would not insured a rebuilt vehicle because no matter what there is always going to be an issue if the vehicle is totaled as to what the value of the vehicle is. You and I know that a vehicle with a rebuilt title will be worth less that a vehicle with a clear title. I would use a stated value policy to value the vehicle so that there is no misunderstanding if an accident occurred.
Lake Worth, Florida, is in area code 561.
No.
No. The vehicle is worth what the vehicle is worth, no matter how it was totaled
The air distance from Lake Worth, Florida, to Ocoee, Florida, is 163 miles. That equals 262 kilometers or 141 nautical miles.
Depends on the condition of the vehicle, but they can range from $3000 needing work to selling for well over $30,000 if the vehilcle has been either reconditioned or with original low mileage.
Florida
Commercial Bank have Net worth 200,0000