ValueProof Guide

Total Loss Settlement Letter, Taxes, and Fees: What to Review

The settlement letter may include more than the vehicle value. Check taxes, fees, deductions, and payment details.

settlement letter 4 minute read
Short Answer

A settlement letter should be reviewed for the vehicle value, taxes, title or registration fees, deductible, lienholder payoff, salvage retention, and any deductions that affect the final payment.

A settlement letter can include several items besides the vehicle value. Before signing or accepting payment, read the whole letter and compare it to the valuation report.

settlement letter and calculator for total loss claim review
A settlement letter should be checked for value, taxes, fees, deductions, and payment details.

Items to review in the payment breakdown

Check the actual cash value, deductible, taxes, title fees, registration fees, lienholder payoff, and any salvage deduction. Also confirm whether the insurer included or excluded taxes and fees based on your state and policy.

  • Actual cash value and any deductions.
  • Deductible and lienholder payoff.
  • Taxes, title fees, and registration fees.
  • Salvage retention or owner-retained value if applicable.

Where confusion often starts

The vehicle value and final payment are not always the same number. For example, a deductible can reduce the payment. A lienholder payoff can change who receives funds. Salvage retention can also affect the final amount if you keep the vehicle.

Because taxes and fees vary by state, avoid assuming every settlement works the same way. The NAIC consumer auto insurance guide gives general background, but your policy and state rules matter. If the value itself looks wrong, review our guide on low total loss offers.

How to keep the review organized

Separate value questions from payment questions. First, decide whether the vehicle value appears supported. Then review the payment breakdown. This prevents a tax or payoff issue from getting mixed up with an actual cash value issue.

Keep copies of each version the insurer sends. If the value, deductible, tax amount, or payoff changes, the older letter can help you understand what changed and why.

When the final payment seems wrong, first separate the vehicle value from taxes, fees, deductibles, and payoffs.

If the letter and report do not line up, submit them through the free value review. We can help identify whether the concern is value-related.

Questions

Common Questions

These answers are general information for vehicle owners reviewing a total loss value dispute.

Why is my payment lower than the vehicle value?

Deductibles, lienholder payoffs, salvage retention, or other settlement items may change the payment.

Do taxes and fees always apply?

They depend on the policy, state rules, and settlement details.

Next Step

Start with a free value review.

Send the insurer valuation, vehicle details, and any supporting documents. If the file appears supportable, ValueProof Pro can send a secure invoice for the online appraisal package.

Start Free Value Review