A driver ran red light at high speed and smashed our 2018 S63 2day ;o(




So your hypothesis is that the car was fixed for around $8k instead? Damn, we would have kept the car but it's too late now so it's just sour grapes on my part but I feel like we were given bad advice from our insurance company. The car had around 41k miles when it was totalled and now it has $49k miles? That is totally insane. Someone fixed it and it looks brand new and probably drives like a dream.
Amazing. I talked to the sales rep at the dealership that is selling it earlier today and he said that the car has been in an accident but it had minor damage to the rear bumper. I then said, "that is not correct, it was hit on the rear driver door and smashed hard", he said "how do you know this"? I said... "because it's my car!!!". He was amazed. I told him that we were told to total it, that is would take $35k to fix it, and he was left speechless.
Well, we of course have a 2025 S63 now and we like it a lot but we totally LOVED this car. Oh well, such is life. The quality of our problems. This isn't the worst problem to have, to have found this out tonight, but I feel sick to my stomach seeing those pics of my old car.




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Well, we of course have a 2025 S63 now and we like it a lot but we totally LOVED this car. Oh well, such is life. The quality of our problems. This isn't the worst problem to have, to have found this out tonight, but I feel sick to my stomach seeing those pics of my old car.
10+ years ago, I almost bought a Hyundai Equus from a local independent dealership. The car looked amazing and drove like a dream! I got suspicious because the price was a little too good to be true. Turns out the car had been totalled. I don't remember how I found out, but when I spoke to the dealership about it they tried to deny it was the same car, then begrudingly admitted it "could" be. It was a salvage title car.
Your old car looks amazing, but it's NOT the same car as when it left the factory, or even what it was the day before your accident. You had the privilege to enjoy it for 6 years, and now you get to enjoy your newer S63 for many more. Thanks for confirming its your old car





10+ years ago, I almost bought a Hyundai Equus from a local independent dealership. The car looked amazing and drove like a dream! I got suspicious because the price was a little too good to be true. Turns out the car had been totalled. I don't remember how I found out, but when I spoke to the dealership about it they tried to deny it was the same car, then begrudingly admitted it "could" be. It was a salvage title car.
Your old car looks amazing, but it's NOT the same car as when it left the factory, or even what it was the day before your accident. You had the privilege to enjoy it for 6 years, and now you get to enjoy your newer S63 for many more. Thanks for confirming its your old car





Last edited by superpop; Feb 12, 2026 at 04:33 PM. Reason: typo




And if it makes you feel any better, you might want to know why I found your car. I make it a point to review Carfax reports every 60-90 days. I look at every 2018-2020 S63 sedan and coupe and count the number of RMS repairs I see on Carfax reports. I know you had a 10 year warranty so it wasn't a big deal for you...but I'm driving "bareback". I keep a folder with all the RMS Carfax reports that I've found and track the percentag of RMS repairs - nomally around 6%-8% - but I know every RMS repair isn't shown on Carfax reports. And occasionally I call the repair shops on the report and ask what they charged for the repair. I've been quoted as low as $1200 for a car that was going to the Manheim auction in PA, to over $9K in SoCal. My expectation is that I'll pay around $5K when mine bites the dust. That's something you never have to think about...But welcome to my world




