My neighbor is a widow and she is trying to sell her husband's 65 Impala SS. She has it insured through Haggerty for $17.5k. She has been asking $18k and only wants to go as low as $16k. She thinks because that is what Haggerty appraised it for, then it must be able to sell for that. While the car is very nice, I just don't see it selling for any where near those prices. I have seen a few for sale in comparable condition between $12 - 15k, but they have been for sale for a while. She is not interested in any kind of trades.
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Is a Haggerty insured value realistic for a sales price?
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Haggerty is agreed value policy. We have our Mopars insured through them and we just fill out what is done to the car and what level of resto has been done. Then you fill in what you want to insure the car for. They either accept or kick it back. But from what some say. If you want $50000 in coverage then you pay the premium for $50000 in coverage. If you $10000 in coverage then you pay the premium for that level of coverage.
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I would think that it's in Haggerty's best interest to appraise a vehicle high, as the higher presumed value equals higher insurance premiums.
Even with an unbiased third-party appraisal, there's what they say it's worth, and there's what somebody will be willing to pay. She can list it for $18k as long as she wants, that doesn't mean she'll find a buyer.
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they wouldn't go too much over on mine.
they did the same on my brothers until he sent pics proving quality and value they still didn't go too out of hand.
I think its agreed value under their projected value.
if they did the impala right it should be slightly high..Last edited by franks; 10-14-2013, 04:49 PM.
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Yeah, I have tried to gently explain to her that restoring classic cars is seldom a money making venture for most average joes. Also, an Impala being as big as it is and not entirely in that sweet spot of musclecardom (Chevelles, GTOs, Camaro, Corvette, etc) it isn't going to be highly sought after and could take years to sell. I managed to help her sell an 06 Harley, a 1930 Olds coupe, and an old Cub Cadet tractor for good/fair. There is also a rough 76 Ford F100 I am about to get running and prepare to sell for her.
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Originally posted by Ted View Posthttp://www.autoweek.com/article/2013...WS01/131009985
They got what I think seems a bit ridiculous for a couple of 65 Impalas, but both with almost no mileage.
I hope she doesn't get wind of this or she will get the idea hers is worth that and never sell it.
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