The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagespry-dove-560

At-fault driver's insurance lowballing my repair estimate by thousands — what do I do?

I'm so frustrated right now and honestly don't know where to turn, so hopefully someone here has dealt with something similar.

About three weeks ago I was sitting at a complete stop waiting to turn and got rear-ended pretty hard. The other driver admitted fault on the scene, police report backs me up, and his insurance accepted liability without any pushback — so that part went fine.

Here's where it fell apart. I took my car to a reputable local body shop that I've used before and trust. Their written estimate came back way higher than I expected, but the work they're describing sounds legitimate — there's frame involvement, some hidden damage that wasn't visible in photos, the whole deal.

The at-fault driver's insurance sent their own adjuster who basically glanced at photos I submitted and came up with a number that's less than half of what the shop says it actually costs to fix the car properly. We're talking a really significant gap here. The insurance company is acting like the body shop is the problem and keeps suggesting I use one of their "preferred" shops instead.

Also — they told me the check would be made out jointly to me AND the body shop, and mailed directly to the shop. Is that even normal?? It feels weird that I have no direct control over my own settlement check.

I don't want a patch job. I want my car fixed correctly. And I don't want to end up paying thousands out of pocket for damage their insured caused.

Has anyone navigated this kind of repair estimate dispute before? Did you push back? Get a lawyer? Just cave and use their preferred shop? I really don't know what my options are here.

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12 replies

  • 22
    genuine-finch-657

    The "preferred shop" thing is a massive red flag. Those shops have agreements with the insurer to keep costs down — who do you think they're actually working for? It's not you. And the joint check mailed to the shop is a classic way to pressure you into going along with their lowball number because suddenly you're stuck in the middle. You have the right to use any licensed shop you choose. Don't let them convince you otherwise.

    • 6
      weary-traveler696

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 17
    spry-raven-869

    Oh man, I went through almost this exact situation last year. The insurance company tried to steer me toward their preferred shop too and when I pushed back my repair guy pointed out they were planning to use non-OEM parts which is why their estimate was so much lower. I held my ground and eventually the gap got narrowed after my shop sent them a detailed line-by-line breakdown with photos. It took about two extra weeks but it was worth it. Don't just accept that first number.

    • 14
      warm-tern-918

      Are you doing okay physically? Sometimes after a rear-end hit people feel fine at first and then neck or back pain creeps up days later. Just want to make sure you're not so focused on the car situation that you're ignoring how your body feels. If anything hurts, even a little, please see a doctor and document it. The car stuff is stressful but your health comes first.

  • 17
    cool-sparrow-681

    I used to work in claims, so let me pull back the curtain a little. That initial photo-based estimate is essentially a floor number — adjusters know full well that once a car is torn down at the shop, more damage shows up. It's called a supplement, and it happens constantly. The problem is that if you're not assertive about it, they'll just sit on the supplement request and delay. Your body shop should be submitting a formal supplement directly to the insurer with documentation. If the shop is experienced, they've done this a hundred times. Also yes, joint checks are standard practice when a shop is involved — it protects the lender if there's a loan on the car, or just ensures the money goes toward repairs. Annoying, but not sinister on its own.

    • 15
      spry-newt-315

      A few things worth knowing: you are generally entitled to have your car restored to pre-accident condition using comparable quality parts. If the insurance company's estimate doesn't reflect that, your shop can submit a supplement and the insurer is supposed to negotiate in good faith. If they keep refusing, that can actually become a bad faith insurance claim depending on your state. Keep every email, every estimate, every phone call logged with date and time. That paper trail matters more than people realize.

    • 10
      quiet-commuter730

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 13
    sharp-badger-020

    Not legal advice, but this is a pretty common scenario that PI attorneys see. When there's a big gap between a legitimate shop estimate and what the insurer will pay, sometimes just a letter from an attorney is enough to get the insurer to take another look. Many personal injury lawyers will do a free consult even on property damage disputes. Worth at least one conversation before you either cave or pay out of pocket. The at-fault driver's insurance is not your friend here — they're trying to close the claim as cheaply as possible.

    • 3
      calm-passenger876

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 13
    genuine-lynx-551

    Get a second estimate from another independent shop — not one on the insurer's preferred list. If both shops are coming in significantly higher than the insurance offer, you have documented proof the insurer is being unreasonable. That's leverage. Also ask your shop if they'll do a "tear-down" inspection and bill the insurer for it. Hidden damage that only shows up once panels come off is exactly why photo estimates are garbage.

    • 9
      honest-survivor732

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 13
    steady-elk-298

    This sounds so exhausting and unfair, especially when you did everything right. You weren't at fault and now you're the one running around trying to fight for a fair repair? That's just wrong. I hope you get this sorted out — don't give up and don't let them bully you into a bad outcome.