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Anyone know anything about Cat D write offs, i know its the level with the least damage but how or if will it affect insurance etc, etc.
I'd have thought the best people to ask is your insurance company.

The full list price of my car when it was brand new was about £28k, (no one but an idiot pays list price) I bought my car at just under 13 months old and it cost £18.5k The price he's being asked to pay is lower because of the fact it is now registered Cat D and the stigma attached. The cost of repair may well be just £1200 but all other expenses related to any other claims such as legal bills, car hire, injury claims etc. all push up the total cost. As the car is written off the insurance company won't be paying out for the repair which because insurance companies are paying will be higher than it really should. Repaired privately, corners are not necessarily cut but done for a much more realistic cost. Had the car been repaired through the insurance I reckon the repair bill would have been double at the very least. For replacing and painting an oem bumper, you are looking in the region of £800, and you're not going to get a replacement tailgate, plus transfer of wiper motor, glass and trim, plus painting for £400 on an insurance quote.Are you sure that damage was the reason for the write off and something else hasn't happened to it? I'd investigate further as it just doesn't seem likely a £13k car would be written off for £1200 of repairs.
Thanks guys, i know the car and its history, was just a rear bumper replacement and tailgate, nothing structural, i saw the car pre fix and gob smacked it was written off, repair receipts seen to the tune of £1200 on a £28,000 car when new, now just over 1 year old and for sale at £13750, there is also an RAC inspection certificate but ive checked with my insurance and they dont need one with it being a Cat 4, they only need a VIC for Cat 3
I had an M3 that had been Cat D very early in it's life. I knew the owner, I knew the guy that put it straight, and I had seen the damage. An offset front end impact that pretty much tore the front corner off, needing a new front chassis leg/subframe putting in, everything that hold the wheel, etc etc. I got it cheap, it was straight as an arrow and drove beautifully. Insuring it wasn't a problem, although I was made aware that a payout in the case of a total loss (again) would be 'significantly less' than market value.
I think there are very few people who can make money by buying a cat D or C car and putting it back on the road, but buying one that's now fixed, providing you're very confident in it's history and what was done by who, if it offers a good saving and you're going to keep the car to get your monies with from it, good savings are there to be had. It will be hassle to sell on until it's really cheap, at which point it becomes irrelevant.