The crux of insurance is to "make you whole".
Suppose I have a 2017 Tesla Model S 75 kWH with 120,000 miles and an interior condition of 7. And I smash it.
Insurance owes me a 2017 Tesla Model S 75 kWH with 120,000 miles and interior condition of 7. They can get there two ways:
- Spend X to repair the car I already own
- Spend Y to buy me another 2017 Model S of same condition.
They will rationally do the cheaper one based on their repair and used-car data.
Because of this, paying collision and fire/theft insurance on a low value beater is often unwise. The difficulty is realizing when you turned the corner.
They will not actually buy me another 2017 Tesla Model S 75 kWH with 120,000 miles and interior condition of 7. It would be too difficult to find one, and I would not appreciate it anyway, since I really hoped to put the payout toward a 2022. So the insurer will give a cash payout instead, at which point my car belongs to them. That makes perfect sense because who wants a wrecked car lying around their property, and they are entitled to its residual value.
If that is not appropriate, it's perfectly acceptable to ask them to do something else and let you keep the old car for whatever your purposes may be. If they are going to continue to insure it, they will want to know it is safe.
because for some reason they seemed to think the repairs would be more expensive than the car (which is false).
Not false. They only work with first-rate shops for liability reasons. Thus, they are more expensive than you are expecting to pay.
Question 1: Can insurance companies just take away cars like they implied? They really wanted to know where it was without asking for permission.
I gather that you contacted the insurer merely to give them legal notice of the accident? They may be moving quickly and not really pausing to ask what you want. They are under the impression that you are trying to file a damage claim, because why else would you be talking to them? They are trying to payout your claim. If that is wrong, you need to talk to them.
Question 2: Now with this settlement payment (they confirmed the amount in writing, so we assume they will pay), are there implications such as: Can they still take away the car later? Will they pay in case of future damages?
Typically a "total" offer requires handover (and includes removal) of the car. Normally when collecting a totaled car, it was towed off the motorway to a storage yard. They expect to go there, pick up your car, and settle your tow and storage fees on your behalf. That's all they need to payout a claim.
If you have the car, you either tell them your address and they collect it, or drive/tow it to their depot, at which point they release the cheque.
If you want to keep the car, you need to have that conversation with them. That will probably change the payout.
Obviously, they will not pay a second time for the repair you did not do, unless you get hit there again and it's much worse.
If your car is a beater, it is sheer madness to keep paying collision and theft insurance.
Question 3: This behavior by the insurance to pay more than the cost of repair seems odd. Is this common or why are they doing this?
Seems odd to me as well. If "repair" > "buy comparable car" you should get the lesser amount.
Maybe they are compensating you for not having to send a tow truck (the deal may be deliver it to them) or they are linking you into a government scrappage scheme where the government is paying to take it off the road.
Question 4: Should we switch insurance companies? The way they put us under pressure was not at all nice.
I would attribute that to inexperience with the process, and fair chance they're under-staffed and under-trained and moving fast and you both did not communicate well.