Photographic Proof: Documenting Every Mod for the Adjuster

My car burned to the ground. Total loss. I told the adjuster about the $3,000 turbo, the $2,000 seats, and the $1,500 ECU. He said, “Do you have proof?” I had no receipts (bought cash/used) and no recent photos of the interior. I got paid for a stock car.

Key Takeaways

  • Burden of Proof: You must prove the loss. If the car is ash, you can’t prove what seats were in it without photos.
  • The “Walkaround” Video: Once a year, take a 2-minute video walking around and inside the car. Open the hood. Open the trunk. Zoom in on mods. Upload it to the cloud.
  • Metadata Matters: Digital photos have dates. A photo from 2021 doesn’t prove the part was there in 2026. You need recent proof.
  • Spreadsheet: Maintain a Google Sheet with Part Name, Date Acquired, and Estimated Value. Share it with your agent before the loss.

The “Why” (The Trap): Post-Loss Speculation

Adjusters are trained to be skeptical. Everyone claims they had a “brand new engine” in their burnt car.
Without evidence, they default to the VIN decode: Stock.
Receipts are great, but Photos are undeniable proof of condition and installation.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of a Google Drive folder named “Car Insurance Proof” containing videos and PDFs]

The Investigation: I Called Them

What proof do they accept?

1. State Farm

  • Standard: Receipts preferred.
  • Alternative: “Clear, dated photographs showing the equipment installed on the vehicle.”

2. Hagerty

  • Standard: They ask for photos when you buy the policy.
  • Advice: “Update us if you change things. If we have the photo on file, there is no argument.”

3. Independent Appraiser

  • Advice: “I can’t appraise a pile of ash. I need to see the quality of the build. A video is worth $10,000 in a total loss negotiation.”

Comparison Table

Evidence TypeStrengthEffort
Memory / WordWeak (Denied)None
Credit Card StatementMediumHigh (Digging)
Itemized ReceiptStrongHigh (Filing)
Dated Video/PhotoVery StrongLow (5 mins)

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Do It Now: Stop reading. Go to your car. Take a video. Narrate it: “Here are the Recaro seats, here is the Haltech ECU…”
  2. Upload to Cloud: Don’t keep it on your phone (which might burn in the fire/crash). Google Drive / iCloud.
  3. Email Your Agent: Send the photos to your agent. “Just for your file.” This creates a timestamped record that they received the info.
  4. Photograph Part Numbers: When installing parts, take a photo of the part number stamped on the metal. It proves it’s a Garrett Turbo, not an eBay clone.

FAQ Section

Does social media count?
Yes! Instagram posts are dated. I have seen claims paid because the owner showed an Instagram post from the car show 2 weeks prior showing the new wheels.

What if I don’t have receipts for used parts?
Use “Comparable Listings.” Find the same part used on eBay and print the listing to establish market value.

Can I claim my own labor?
No, but you can claim the value of a finished car (which includes labor) if you have an Agreed Value policy.

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