Alabama's total loss threshold is 75% — meaning your vehicle is declared a total loss when the cost to repair it exceeds 75% of its actual cash value (ACV). For example, if your car has an ACV of $20,000 and repair estimates reach $15,000 or more, the insurance company will total your vehicle and pay you the ACV minus your deductible rather than authorizing repairs.

How Alabama's 75% Threshold Works

When you file a collision or comprehensive claim after an accident or covered event, the insurance adjuster will estimate both the repair cost and your vehicle's actual cash value. Specifically, ACV accounts for your vehicle's year, make, model, mileage, condition, and local market comparable sales. Specifically, if the repair estimate divided by the ACV equals 0.75 or higher, your car is totaled under Alabama law.

In practice, insurance companies often total vehicles at lower repair-to-value ratios because they also factor in rental car costs, supplemental repair estimates, diminished value, and the potential for hidden damage discovered during repairs. Consequently, your vehicle might be totaled at 65-70% even though the statutory threshold is 75%.

What This Means for You

What Happens After Your Car Is Totaled in Alabama?

Once your vehicle is declared a total loss, the process typically follows these steps:

  1. Valuation: The insurer determines your vehicle's ACV using tools like CCC, Mitchell, or Audatex, plus local comparable sales
  2. Settlement offer: You receive a payout equal to the ACV minus your deductible
  3. Negotiation window: You can dispute the valuation with evidence of higher comparable sales or unique vehicle features
  4. Title transfer: You sign over your vehicle title to the insurance company
  5. Payment: You receive payment, typically within 7-14 days of agreeing to the settlement

Can You Keep a Totaled Vehicle in Alabama?

Yes. Additionally, if you want to keep your totaled vehicle, the insurer will deduct the salvage value from your settlement. In fact, alabama requires a salvage title for any vehicle declared a total loss. Importantly, to put the vehicle back on the road, you'll need to repair it, pass a state safety inspection, and obtain a rebuilt title from the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency (ALEA).

Gap Insurance and Total Loss

If you owe more on your car loan than the vehicle's ACV, you'll be responsible for the difference — unless you have gap insurance. Furthermore, gap insurance covers the "gap" between what the insurance company pays and what you still owe on your loan or lease. As a result, this is especially important for newer vehicles that depreciate quickly and for borrowers who made low down payments.

Related Resources:

Questions about your Alabama auto insurance coverage? Call Bridgeway Insurance at 601-264-0541 or request a free quote online.

Bridgeway Insurance Agency — bridgewayins.com

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