Total loss / actual cash value calculator
If your car is totaled, what should the insurance settlement be? Estimate ACV from market base, mileage, condition, and prior damage — and learn how to negotiate if their offer is too low.
What "actual cash value" actually means
Actual cash value (ACV) is what your insurer is contractually required to pay when your vehicle is declared a total loss. It's defined in most state insurance regulations as the fair market value of a comparable vehicle just before the accident occurred — not the replacement cost of a new vehicle, and not what you originally paid.
The standard formula every major insurer uses:
| Component | What it captures |
|---|---|
| Base retail value | What 4-6 comparable vehicles in your market are listed for, averaged |
| Mileage adjustment | ±$0.05-$0.20 per mile vs. age-adjusted norm (more miles = lower) |
| Condition adjustment | 5-30% up/down for documented pre-accident wear |
| Prior-damage adjustment | 10-35% down if Carfax shows previous accidents |
| Regional adjustment | ±5% for tight vs soft local markets |
| Sales tax + registration | Added in 23 states (CA, NY, FL, IL, etc. require it; 27 don't) |
The insurer's first offer is almost always 10-20% low
Insurers run your loss through proprietary valuation software (CCC One, Audatex, Mitchell), and those tools tend to pull comparable vehicles from the cheaper end of the market. State insurance departments have documented the pattern. A 2019 California Department of Insurance review found that average CCC ACV offers ran 12% below independent KBB Private Party Value.
If their offer comes in well below the figure this calculator produces, build your own case: pull five or more actual listings of comparable vehicles in your zip code, document the pre-accident condition, and dig out recent maintenance receipts. Then submit a written counteroffer. Most insurers will move, because the alternative for them is slow and expensive: NAIC arbitration or a state insurance commission complaint.
Don't forget: sales tax + reg are owed too
In 23 states, your insurer must reimburse the sales tax and registration you'd pay buying a replacement vehicle at ACV. If the "settlement check" they hand you leaves those out, ask why. Check where your state lands on the all states page, and run the numbers on the used car sales tax calculator. Note that the replacement registration is a separate add-on, not the same thing as the registration fee on the car you lost.
If you owe more than ACV
If your loan balance is bigger than the insurer's ACV settlement, you're underwater. That's common in the first three years of a long auto loan, when depreciation outpaces what you've paid down. Gap insurance exists for exactly this situation: if you carry it, the gap policy covers the shortfall. If you don't, the leftover balance is still yours to pay. It's the main reason financial advisors push for 20% down up front — see our affordability calculator.
Frequently asked questions
What is actual cash value (ACV)?
ACV is the fair market value of a vehicle just before it was totaled — what a comparable vehicle in your market would sell for. It's defined in most state insurance regulations as the standard insurance must pay. ACV is not replacement cost (a new vehicle) and not what you originally paid.
Why is the insurance company offering me less than ACV?
Insurer valuation software (CCC One, Audatex, Mitchell) systematically pulls lower-end comparables. The 2019 California Department of Insurance review found CCC offers averaged 12% below KBB Private Party. The first offer is almost always 10-20% low. Negotiate with your own comparable listings.
Does the insurer have to pay sales tax + registration on top of ACV?
In 23 states yes — laws require the insurer to reimburse sales tax and registration you'd pay buying a replacement at ACV. The 27 other states leave it as a contract question. Check your state's insurance department FAQ.
How do I negotiate a higher total loss settlement?
Gather 5+ actual listings of comparable vehicles in your zip code, document pre-accident condition with photos and maintenance receipts, then submit a written counteroffer with the higher figure and supporting evidence. NAIC arbitration is the next step if they refuse.
What if I owe more than the ACV settlement?
If you have gap insurance, it pays the difference between insurance settlement and loan balance. If you don't have gap, you still owe the lender the remaining balance after the insurance check pays down the loan. This is why financial advisors push 20% down — see our affordability calculator.