Hopefully someone can help me with a vehicle titling issue in the state of Michigan.
I have been working my way the Michigan SOS website but cannot find this answer.
According to the State of Michigan, when a vehicle is damaged, and the cost to repair exceeds 75% of the vehicle value, the Insurance Company is required to apply for a salvaged title. This is pretty straight forward.
What I am trying to find out is, what if the cost of repairs is less than 75% of the vehicle's value but the Insurance Company buys it back anyway. Are they still required to apply for a salvaged title?
I ran into a situation where a used vehicle I was looking is listed as having a clean title. When I pulled the Carfax it shows as a Total Loss due to a claim buy back. However, the AutoCheck also lists the vehicle as an claim buy back, but not a total loss.
I can confirm that previous Insurance Company bought back the vehicle and sent it to a salvage auction. The value of the vehicle was listed as $31k and the repair cost at $20. That's only 65% repair cost.
Does anyone have any insight into how this process works?
I have been working my way the Michigan SOS website but cannot find this answer.
According to the State of Michigan, when a vehicle is damaged, and the cost to repair exceeds 75% of the vehicle value, the Insurance Company is required to apply for a salvaged title. This is pretty straight forward.
What I am trying to find out is, what if the cost of repairs is less than 75% of the vehicle's value but the Insurance Company buys it back anyway. Are they still required to apply for a salvaged title?
I ran into a situation where a used vehicle I was looking is listed as having a clean title. When I pulled the Carfax it shows as a Total Loss due to a claim buy back. However, the AutoCheck also lists the vehicle as an claim buy back, but not a total loss.
I can confirm that previous Insurance Company bought back the vehicle and sent it to a salvage auction. The value of the vehicle was listed as $31k and the repair cost at $20. That's only 65% repair cost.
Does anyone have any insight into how this process works?