how would it be any different if there was a loan? The loan still has to be paid off whether the car is totalled or not.This. This is why buying the car with cash does not pay off. No way the user becomes whole after this.
I always finance too for various reasons.This. This is why buying the car with cash does not pay off. No way the user becomes whole after this.
Wonder what the story is on this sickening crash. Hope no one was hurt. It would be gut wrenching if this was caused by the hyper-attention this vehicle gets.
The damage is like someone overshot a stop sign or red light into traffic in front of the Cybertruck. And then only the front corners engaged, causing the front of the other vehicle to slide across the side of the truck as the truck came to a stop. Hence the 'bite' of bumper stuck in the door.Looks like a side swap, hope it was not someone driving while takin pictures of the truck.
Replacement coverage is irrelevant doesn't care if there's a loan, unless the bank will give them a discount on paying off the remainder.gap buddy
Whelp, market value replacement cost for a similar gently used Cybertruck is currently about $150K. Not sure how else you would simply replace it with the long line of reservations....The damage is like someone overshot a stop sign or red light into traffic in front of the Cybertruck. And then only the front corners engaged, causing the front of the other vehicle to slide across the side of the truck as the truck came to a stop. Hence the 'bite' of bumper stuck in the door.
Replacement coverage is irrelevant doesn't care if there's a loan, unless the bank will give them a discount on paying off the remainder.
Always get replacement coverage for things you can't afford to lose.
-Crissa
The Nissan almost certainly caused more monetary damage.Which one WON?