Yes.
Unfortunately yes. Even if you lose your lawsuit and are left with a uselss car you still have to pay off the loan or default on it and let the dealership reposess it. Even then the dealership will ruin your credit and charge you for the remainder of the loan minus whatever they sell the car for, which won't be close to it's value.
Bottom line, pay it or file bankruptcy or find a good lawyer that know a debt dispute loophole .
An insurance company declares a vehicle totaled when the cost to fix the vehicle exceeds 70% or more of its market value.
I totaled my Mustang and was able to buy it back from the insurance company. They gave me the Blue-Book value less my $500 deductable. They would not insure it after I repaired it, I had to switch insurance carriers to get coverage.
The insurance company will pay the finance company not you.
When a vehicle covered by insurance gets wrecked, the insurance company looks at how much it will cost to repair. If repairing the bike costs more than it is worth, then the insurance company declares it totaled and pays for a replacement.
The insurance company. They have in theory bought the car or what was left of it.
It would depend on why the car was totaled and who's fault the accident was and what time of insurance do you have PLPD or Full Coverage
The insurance company will make you an offer.
Legally, if the company pays you for the totaled vehicle, it belongs to them. You can offer (if they don't) to by the scraps back. This would be deducted from your settlement and you would be paid the difference.
The insurance company will pay you the worth of your car minus your deductible.
This is total nonsense!My total is 52.
What. Why would you think this is required? An insurance company will not find you a new vehicle is your is totaled, they will pay you the actual cash value of the vehicle you had.
If you want to keep a totaled car, the insurance company will determine the salvage value and deduct that from your settlement check. You can still get liability insurance (if there are no safety issues related to the damage), but not collision or comprehensive unless you have the repairs made.