The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancebold-hare-302

At-fault driver's insurance lowballed my parked car damage — now ghosting me on the difference

So this whole situation has me stressed out and I just need to know if anyone else has dealt with something like this.

About six weeks ago my car was parked on the street outside my apartment while I was at work. Came home and found a note on my windshield — someone had sideswiped me pulling out of a tight spot and took off a chunk of my rear quarter panel plus cracked the taillight assembly. To their credit, they actually left their info instead of just disappearing.

Filed a claim with their insurance. The adjuster asked me to submit photos through their online portal instead of having anyone physically look at the car. That already felt weird to me but I figured okay, fine. Their estimate came back noticeably lower than what two different body shops quoted me. We're talking a real gap — not a rounding error.

I pushed back and the adjuster said something like "go ahead and get it into the shop, and if the final repair invoice is higher we'll cover the supplemental amount." I made sure to get that in writing through the claims messaging system, which — thank god I did.

Car goes into the shop. Additional damage found once they got into it (which both shops had warned me might happen). Final invoice comes in well above the original estimate. I submitted everything to the adjuster.

That was three weeks ago. Now I'm getting vague responses, delays, and a whole lot of "we're reviewing it." The body shop is starting to ask me about the outstanding balance and I genuinely don't know what I'm supposed to do here.

Does anyone know if that written agreement in the portal actually means anything? Should I be doing something more aggressive right now or just keep waiting?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 18
    cool-lynx-723

    That low photo-estimate thing is a classic move. They lowball you early hoping you'll just accept it and go away. The fact that they're now slow-walking the supplement after you got it in writing tells me they were probably never thrilled about that commitment. Keep every single message. Screenshot the portal if you can — some of those systems have a way of "timing out" your access after a claim closes.

    • 24
      bold-swift-947

      I used to work claims and I'll be honest — photo estimates are almost always going to miss hidden damage. That's just the reality. The supplement process is supposed to handle exactly what you're describing, and a written acknowledgment in the claim portal absolutely counts as documentation. The delay you're seeing might be the adjuster waiting for a supervisor to sign off on anything above a certain threshold, which happens a lot with supplemental payments. I'd send a written follow-up through the portal today restating what was agreed to, attaching the final invoice again, and asking for a specific decision date. Paper trail everything.

  • 13
    curious-marten-317

    That message thread in their portal is really important — don't let anyone tell you it's not. Written communication from an adjuster about covering the remaining balance can absolutely be held up as a commitment. If they keep stalling, you may want to look into filing a complaint with your state's department of insurance. Insurers take those seriously because regulators track response time violations. It's free to file and sometimes just the mention of it gets things moving.

    • 7
      warm-badger-813

      Went through almost exactly this last year. Different insurance company but same playbook — photo estimate, lowball number, "we'll cover the difference" promise, then radio silence once the real bill came in. What finally worked for me was sending a formal written demand (not just a portal message, an actual email to a supervisor) with a deadline. The moment I mentioned I was going to file a complaint it got resolved within a week. Hang in there, it's exhausting but you're not wrong here.

    • 7
      curious-passenger805

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 8
    brave-seal-153

    This kind of drawn-out financial stress after an accident is genuinely hard on people. I see it affect patients' recovery all the time — the anxiety of an unresolved claim lingers. I know that's not the practical answer you need right now, but please don't let this consume you completely. You did the right things: got quotes, got it in writing, kept records. You're in a better position than most people who come to me venting about this stuff.

    • 3
      grounded-co-pilot789

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 6
    curious-newt-906

    Stop waiting. Call the adjuster's direct line today, not the general claims number. If you don't get a clear answer with a date, ask to escalate to their supervisor. Be polite but be direct — tell them the body shop is waiting on payment and you need a resolution date. Vague "we're reviewing it" after three weeks is not acceptable and most adjusters know that. Squeaky wheel gets the grease here.

    • 7
      steady-wanderer325

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 13
    steady-wren-437

    Quick question — did you get both shop quotes before the car went in, or did the higher number come purely from the teardown once it was already apart? I ask because if the supplemental damage was only discovered mid-repair, some insurers will want their own re-inspection before approving it, which might explain part of the delay. Not saying they're in the right, just wondering if that's a factor.

  • 20
    bold-beaver-556

    Not legal advice, but: written acknowledgment in a claims portal of an agreement to pay the balance is meaningful. If they ultimately refuse to honor it, that's the kind of thing a personal injury or property damage attorney would be very interested in — especially since the liability here sounds clear-cut (parked car, their insured at fault). Most PI attorneys offer free consultations. Worth at least a conversation if this drags on much longer.

  • 13
    brave-vole-298

    Ugh, this is so unfair. You did literally everything right and you're still getting the runaround. I really hope you get this sorted out soon — please keep us posted on what happens.