It's all a big [edited], that has no basis in reality.
This is true but KBB has nothing to do with the values. I had a bone stock base model 07 Tacoma that got totaled. They literally pulled comps off of Craigslist and cut us a check based on those values. KBB would have been much lower.One of the often-overlooked risks of over-paying for a vehicle, is that if someone runs into it and totals it, the insurance company is only going to pay out what the vehicle is actually worth, not what you paid for it. So if you pay $20,000 for a vehicle that's only worth $10,000, and it gets totaled, the insurance company is only going to pay you $10,000, and you lose the other $10,000. It gets worse if the vehicle is financed, because the vehicle is the security on the loan, so if you somehow got a loan for $20,000 on a $10,000 vehicle and it gets totaled, the security on the loan (the car) no longer exists, and you owe ALL $20,000 to the bank right now.
You seem to be spinning lots of yarns based on nothing but a KBB number. If you wish to live in reality...
This is true but KBB has nothing to do with the values. I had a bone stock base model 07 Tacoma that got totaled. They literally pulled comps off of Craigslist and cut us a check based on those values. KBB would have been much lower.
That was my first hand experience. It was 5 years ago. The adjuster emailed the ads. I actually went and looked at the trucks and took photos of the ones that were best. He pulled them from the same and have is another $1100. I ended up buying one of the trucks as a replacement ?. Maybe the adjuster was lacking proper training. Maybe they felt bad for us for getting rear ended at a red light on a sunny day. That's the only time I've gone through that process so maybe it was fluke.That's not possible. Comps are reported sales prices, and Craigslist doesn't report sales prices.
For a vehicle that common, there's no reason they wouldn't have used KBB. The only time an insurance company would need to pull ACTUAL comps, would be in the case of something that has too few reported sales for KBB to have accurate data, like a Ferrari 250 GTO for example...
One of the often-overlooked risks of over-paying for a vehicle, is that if someone runs into it and totals it, the insurance company is only going to pay out what the vehicle is actually worth, not what you paid for it. So if you pay $20,000 for a vehicle that's only worth $10,000, and it gets totaled, the insurance company is only going to pay you $10,000, and you lose the other $10,000. It gets worse if the vehicle is financed, because the vehicle is the security on the loan, so if you somehow got a loan for $20,000 on a $10,000 vehicle and it gets totaled, the security on the loan (the car) no longer exists, and you owe ALL $20,000 to the bank right now.
Here is a 2012 with 80k miles for $20k.