It wasn’t your fault. Someone ran the light or never looked up from their phone, and now your car is wrecked and you’re the one stuck without a way to get to work.

So you start asking the obvious question. Can you make them pay for it?

You can, but you’re about to be tested. Within a day or two, the other driver’s insurance company will call, sounding friendly and helpful, with a number that’s lower than your car was worth.

What most people don’t realize is that the call is the opening move in a fight. At Keith & Lorfing, our Lubbock car accident lawyers have stood in that fight beside working West Texans for years, and below is everything the insurance company hopes you’ll never find out.

The first offer is never the real offer

In Texas, the driver who caused the wreck is legally responsible for your losses. That’s because Texas is an at-fault state, which means you can go straight at the at-fault driver’s insurance instead of waiting on your own.

So when an adjuster slides a number across the table on day three, that’s not the price of your truck. It’s the opening bid in a negotiation you didn’t know you’d entered.

Day-three phone call
That first offer isn't the price of your truck. It's the opening bid in a fight you didn't know you'd entered.
The first offer isn't the ceiling — it's the floor the insurer hopes you'll stand on.
Lorfing Law
West Texas Tough™

The state sets minimum coverage at $30,000 per person and $60,000 per accident for injuries, plus $25,000 for property damage, which insurers call 30/60/25. You can confirm those limits with the Texas Department of Insurance. Out here, $25,000 rarely covers a late-model truck or SUV.

That gap is the carrier’s problem, not yours, and there are ways to close it. The mistake most people make is treating the first offer as the ceiling, when it’s really the floor the insurer is hoping you’ll stand on.

There’s one more thing the friendly call rarely mentions. Your wrecked car and your injured body are two completely separate claims. The damage to your vehicle is one case, while your medical bills, lost paychecks, and pain make up another, and the injury claim is almost always worth far more.

Settle the car too fast and you can sign language that quietly bleeds into your injury claim. If you were hurt, talk to our personal injury team before you settle anything.

If a carrier is already pushing a number at you, call Keith & Lorfing at (325) 225-0143 first. The consultation is free, and a five-minute conversation can be worth thousands.

What “totaled” really means, and where insurers shave the number

An insurance company doesn’t total your car because it’s wrecked. It totals your car when the math stops working in its favor.

A vehicle is a total loss when repairs plus salvage value reach the car’s actual cash value. In practice, many insurers pull the trigger once repairs hit roughly 70% to 80% of that value.

So everything hinges on one number, the actual cash value, or ACV. And ACV is exactly where carriers quietly shave dollars off your claim.

ACV is not what you paid, and it’s not what a new one costs. It’s the fair market value of your specific vehicle, based on year, mileage, and condition, the instant before the crash. The adjuster usually pulls that number from a national database that has never set foot in West Texas.

Why this hits West Texans the hardest

Drive through Snyder, Big Spring, or Sweetwater and you’ll see the trucks that built this part of the state. They’re older, higher-mileage, paid off, and worth more to a local buyer than any algorithm guesses.

Imagine a Midland oilfield hand whose paid-for 2016 F-150 gets crushed by a driver who blew a stop sign. The carrier offers $14,000, but the same truck with the same miles is listing for closer to $19,000 on local lots, and tax and title on a replacement add another $1,300 out of his pocket. (That’s an illustrative example, not a client’s case, though it’s the kind of gap we see all the time.)

You can fight a low number with comparable local listings, and as of September 1, 2025, Texas law gives you a sharper tool. Senate Bill 458 requires personal auto policies to carry an independent appraisal clause for disputes over the amount of a loss, and that requirement applies to policies issued or renewed on or after January 1, 2026.

Almost no competing article in Texas mentions SB 458 yet. We do, because that clause can be the line between cashing a lowball check and getting paid what your truck is actually worth.

A Sharper Tool As Of Sept. 1, 2025
You can fight a low number with comparable local listings — and Senate Bill 458 now requires personal auto policies to carry an independent appraisal clause for disputes over the amount of a loss, for policies issued or renewed on or after January 1, 2026. That clause can be the line between cashing a lowball check and getting paid what your truck is actually worth.

Your claim is worth more than the car

Most people assume a totaled car gets them a single payout for the value of the vehicle. Texas law says otherwise, and the extras add up fast.

What You Can Recover
What You Can Recover
What It Actually Means For You
Actual cash value (ACV)
Fair market value of your vehicle the moment before the crash.
Sales tax, title & registration
The real cost of putting a replacement in your driveway.
Rental car costs
A way to keep working while your claim drags on.
Damaged personal property
Tools, car seats, gear destroyed in the wreck.
Diminished value
The resale money you lose even after a “perfect” repair.

Watch one trap closely. You are not automatically owed the payoff on your car loan. If you owe more than the ACV, gap insurance covers the difference, and without it, you’re left writing checks on a truck you can’t drive.

That’s reason enough to push back on a soft offer instead of signing it to end the stress.

The money almost everyone leaves behind

Say your car gets repaired instead of replaced. It looks fixed and it drives fine, yet it’s still worth less, because no buyer pays full price for a car with a wreck on its record. That loss has a name, diminished value.

Texas lets you claim diminished value against the at-fault driver’s insurer, separate from your repair bill. Picture a San Angelo teacher whose three-year-old sedan is repaired beautifully, then appraises $4,000 lower because the accident now shows on its history report.

You have two years to file that claim, and you’ll want an independent appraisal documenting the before-and-after value. Your own collision policy generally won’t pay it, since this is a claim against the driver who hit you.

If your gut says the offer doesn’t add up, it probably doesn’t. Call us at (325) 225-0143 and we’ll tell you what the full claim is worth, free of charge.

The adjuster is friendly for a reason

The kind voice on the phone works for the at-fault driver, not for you. Friendliness is cheaper than fair compensation, and a relaxed claimant signs faster.

So when the adjuster asks for “just a quick recorded statement,” understand what’s happening. They’re not gathering your side out of courtesy. They’re collecting words that can be used to chip away at your claim later. You are not required to give one, and you usually shouldn’t.

A few habits protect you while the claim is open.

  • Get every offer in writing before you respond to it.
  • Keep a running list of your losses, including rental, tax and title, damaged property, and time off work, so nothing gets quietly dropped.
  • Don’t sign a release until you know the full size of your claim.

Texas also puts the insurer on a clock through the Prompt Payment of Claims Act, found in Chapter 542 of the Insurance Code.

Prompt Payment Of Claims Act
The clock the insurer is on
1
Within 15 days
Acknowledge & investigate
They must open your claim and begin looking into it.
2
15 business days
Accept or reject — in writing
Counted from when they have all your documents.
3
5 business days
Send the payment
Once the claim is accepted, the money is due.
!
Miss a deadline
18% yearly penalty
Plus your attorney's fees — leverage on your side.
Lorfing Law · West Texas Tough™
Tex. Ins. Code Ch. 542. Not legal advice.

Blow those deadlines without a good reason, and the carrier can owe an 18% yearly penalty on top of what they already owed you, plus your attorney’s fees. That penalty is leverage the insurance company is praying you never learn about.

When an adjuster starts stalling or stonewalling, that’s our cue. Call Keith & Lorfing at (325) 225-0143 and we’ll handle the carrier so you can get back to your life.

Should you actually sue? The honest math

Yes, you can sue the at-fault driver over your totaled car. But we won’t tell you to file a lawsuit just to file one, because sometimes it’s the wrong move.

A lawsuit is a tool, and a good lawyer tells you when the tool fits the job.

A lawsuit is a tool
Should you sue? The honest math
Suing makes sense when
The driver is uninsured or barely insured.
The offer is far below your real losses.
The insurer is acting in bad faith.
Your damages outrun what the claim paid.
Suing tends to backfire when
The driver has no assets and no insurance to collect from.
Your losses are small and court costs would swallow them.
Liability is genuinely a coin-flip.
A judgment would likely be uncollectable.
The 51% bar Texas uses modified comparative negligence: at 51% or more at fault you recover nothing, and any share of blame cuts your payout.
Lorfing Law · West Texas Tough™
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 33.001. Not legal advice.

One rule shadows every decision on that list. Texas uses modified comparative negligence with a 51% bar, set out in Section 33.001 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code.

In plain terms, if you’re found 51% or more at fault, you walk away with nothing. If you’re 25% at fault, your recovery drops by a quarter. That’s why insurers fight so hard to pin a slice of the blame on you, since every percentage point is money out of your pocket.

Small claims or the big courtroom?

Where you file depends on how much you’re chasing. Texas small claims court, formally called justice court, handles money disputes up to $20,000, a limit set by the Texas State Law Library.

 Justice (small claims) courtDistrict court
Claim sizeUp to $20,000Larger claims
Pace and formalityFaster, less formalSlower, more involved
Need a lawyer?Not requiredStrongly advised
Best forA totaled car within the limitInjury cases and complex losses

For a vehicle-only claim under $20,000, small claims can be a fast, practical path. The moment injuries or serious money enter the picture, you want a trial lawyer in your corner, and trial is where we live.

What if the other driver had no insurance?

Texas requires liability coverage, but plenty of drivers skip it anyway. Get hit by one of them and the panic doubles, because the obvious source of money just vanished.

You still have roads to recovery. Think of a driver outside Snyder rear-ended by someone with no insurance and no intention of paying, who turns out to be far from out of options.

When the obvious money vanishes
Four roads to recovery after an uninsured driver
1
UMPD
Covers your vehicle on your own policy, after a $250 deductible set by Texas law.
2
UMBI
Covers your medical bills and injuries from the crash, if you carry it.
3
Collision coverage
Pays for your car no matter who's at fault, though the deductible is usually higher.
4
Direct lawsuit
Lets you go after the driver personally, but what you collect depends on what they own.
Do not stop at the first “no insurance” answer. Finding every source of coverage takes digging, and this is where people miss money they are owed.
Lorfing Law · West Texas Tough™
Coverage depends on your policy and facts. Not legal advice.

Finding every one of those sources takes digging, and it’s exactly where people miss money they’re owed. Our team handles uninsured motorist accidents and chases down every dollar on the table.

If an uninsured or hit-and-run driver left you stranded, call our West Texas car accident attorneys at (325) 225-0143. The call is free, and there’s no pressure to hire us.

The two-year clock is already running

You have two years from the date of the wreck to file a property damage lawsuit in Texas. That deadline lives in Section 16.003 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code, and it covers diminished value claims too.

Let it pass and your case is over, no matter how badly you were wronged. The courts don’t bend on this one.

Two years can feel like forever, right up until evidence fades and witnesses forget. The sooner we get started, the harder we can swing.

Why West Texans bring these fights to us

Insurance carriers count on you not knowing the rules of their own game. We’ve spent our careers on the other side of that table, and we know every move before they make it.

Russell Lorfing was a federal prosecutor in Lubbock, so he knows how a case is built and how to take one apart. Our attorneys carry over 500 jury trials and more than 75 years of combined experience, including several former federal and state prosecutors.

What your truck is really worth
To a billion-dollar insurer, your totaled truck is a line item to minimize. To us, it's how you get to work, to church, and to a better life for your kids.
We come from people like you — and we treat your claim that way.
Lorfing Law
West Texas Tough™

We come from people like you. Our fathers and grandfathers were mechanics, laborers, firefighters, and enlisted military, and we haven’t forgotten where we’re from.

With offices in Lubbock, Midland, San Angelo, and Abilene, we fight for the Big Country, not for Dallas or Houston. If your crash happened in or around Lubbock, our Lubbock car accident attorneys know the local courts and insurers firsthand.

  • A lawyer answers your calls and emails, not a call center in another time zone.
  • You’ll know where your claim stands at every step, in plain English.
  • We work injury claims on contingency, so you owe nothing unless we win for you.

To a billion-dollar insurer, your totaled truck is a line item to minimize. To us, it’s how you get to work, to church, and to a better life for your kids, and we treat it that way.

Call Keith & Lorfing today at (325) 225-0143, or contact our team for a free consultation. We’ll tell you honestly what your claim is worth and exactly how we’d fight for it.

Free Consultation · No Fee Unless We Win
Tell Us What Your Claim Is
Really Worth
To a billion-dollar insurer, your totaled truck is a line item to minimize. To us, it's how you get to work and to a better life for your kids — and we treat it that way.
(325) 225-0143
24/7 · We Answer The Phone

Frequently asked questions

Can I sue for a totaled car even if I already filed an insurance claim?

Yes. Filing a claim and filing a lawsuit aren’t an either-or choice. If the insurance process leaves you short, you can still sue the at-fault driver for the difference, up until the two-year deadline.

Can I keep my totaled car in Texas?

Yes. If the insurer declares a total loss, you can keep the car, and they’ll subtract the salvage value from your check. The vehicle then needs a salvage title, which lowers its resale value and complicates insurance.

Can I also sue for my injuries separately?

Yes, and you usually should treat them separately, because the injury claim is typically worth far more. Don’t settle your injury claim alongside the car until you fully know how hurt you are. 

What if I disagree with the insurer’s ACV number?

You can dispute it. Pull comparable local listings, get an independent appraisal, and put the evidence in front of them. Thanks to Senate Bill 458, Texas auto policies issued or renewed on or after January 1, 2026 must include an independent appraisal clause for disputes over the amount of a loss.

How long does a property damage claim take?

The insurer has 15 days to acknowledge your claim and 15 business days after receiving all your documents to accept or reject it. Simple claims often resolve in a few weeks, while disputed ones take longer.

What if I still owe money on my car loan?

Your settlement pays the loan first. If the ACV is less than your balance, you owe the gap unless you carry gap insurance, which is one more reason to push back on a low offer instead of accepting it.

Preston Martin

March 2023

Mary Books

February 2020

Corwin Kershaw

October 2022

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