Total Loss Claims
What Is Actual Cash Value (ACV)?
When your car is totaled, the insurer doesn't pay to repair it — they pay its actual cash value. Here's what ACV means, how it's calculated, what it should include, and why the first figure is often too low.
- ✓ACV is your car's fair market value the moment before the crash.
- ✓It's not what you paid, what you owe, or the price of a new replacement.
- ✓Insurers calculate it from comparable vehicles plus condition adjustments.
- ✓A fair ACV often includes sales tax and title/registration fees too.
Actual cash value, defined
Actual cash value (ACV) is the fair market value of your specific vehicle the instant before it was damaged: what it would have cost to buy the same car — same condition, mileage, trim, and options — in your local market. When your car is declared a total loss, the ACV is what the insurer pays you.
Crucially, ACV is not what you paid for the car, not what you still owe on it, and not the cost of a brand-new replacement. It’s a snapshot of market value — and because it’s an estimate, it can be argued.
How insurers calculate ACV
Most carriers don’t value your car by hand. They use a valuation system (commonly CCC One) that:
- Pulls comparable vehicles recently listed or sold near you;
- Adjusts each one for differences in mileage, trim, and options;
- Applies a condition adjustment based on how your car is described; and
- Averages the results into a single ACV.
The report looks objective, but every step is a choice — which comps to use and how harshly to rate condition. Change the inputs and the number changes. (See how CCC One valuation works.)
What a fair ACV should include
The headline number isn’t the whole settlement. Depending on your state and policy, a fair ACV payout also includes:
- Sales tax on the replacement value;
- Title and registration fees; and
- Any storage and towing charges from the open claim.
Why the ACV offer comes in low — and what to do
First ACV offers skew low for predictable reasons: weak comparable vehicles, harsh condition ratings, unrecognized options or low mileage, and missing taxes and fees. None of that is necessarily bad faith — it’s how the systems default. But it means the number is a starting point you can challenge. If your documented value is higher, you can dispute the total loss offer with evidence.
Actual cash value FAQ
What does actual cash value mean on a car?+
How is actual cash value calculated?+
Is actual cash value the same as what I owe or what I paid?+
Why is the actual cash value offer so low?+
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Property Damage King is a DBA of Conduit Law. This page is attorney advertising and is provided for general educational purposes only — it is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Insurance and claim rules vary by state and by policy; for guidance on your specific situation, talk to an attorney. Settlement examples are real past results provided for illustration and are not a prediction or guarantee of the outcome of any future claim.