The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
silent-newt-725

At-fault driver's insurer won't cover the full repair bill on my leased car — am I stuck paying the gap?

So I got rear-ended at a red light about three weeks ago. Total stop, daylight, not moving. The guy behind me was clearly on his phone and hit me hard enough to crumple my rear bumper, damage the trunk lid, and mess up some sensors. Liability is not even a question here — he admitted fault at the scene and his insurer already accepted it.

Here's my headache: I'm in a lease, and my lease agreement is very specific that all collision repairs have to go through the manufacturer's certified body shop network and use only OEM parts. Not a suggestion — it's literally in the contract I signed. If I don't follow it, I could be on the hook for non-compliant repairs when I turn the car in.

The at-fault driver's insurance sent someone out, did a quick look, and cut me an estimate that's way lower than what the certified shop is quoting. The certified shop tore into the repair and found additional damage once panels came off (which apparently happens constantly), and now the gap between what insurance wants to pay and what the shop actually needs is pretty significant.

The adjuster keeps telling me I'm "free to choose any shop I want" and that the difference is my problem because I chose a more expensive one. But I didn't choose it — my lease contract requires it. I've explained this probably four times now and keep getting the same canned response.

Has anyone dealt with this? Do I need to get the leasing company directly involved to push back? Should I just get a PI attorney involved at this point? I don't want to eat hundreds of dollars because their adjuster is playing dumb.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 15
    warm-marten-386

    "You're free to choose any shop" is one of the oldest deflection lines in the adjuster playbook. What they're really saying is: we'd prefer you use our DRP shop so we can keep costs down, and if you don't, we'll make you feel like the difference is your fault. It's not. They owe you the cost of a proper repair, full stop. Don't let them reframe your lease obligation as a personal choice you made.

    • 8
      wise-mole-861

      Loop in the leasing company now, not later. They have legal and financial skin in this game — it's their asset getting repaired. Ask them to contact the insurer directly. Also, stop calling and put everything in writing via email from this point forward. You want a paper trail if this ends up in small claims or with a lawyer.

    • 0
      curious-survivor461

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 13
    patient-tern-495

    Has the leasing company actually been notified about the accident yet? Some leases require you to report damage within a specific timeframe. I'd make sure you're covered there before anything else — wouldn't want a procedural issue to complicate your position when pushing back on the insurer.

    • 5
      kind-driver985

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 10
    hearty-mole-624

    Not legal advice, just process stuff: the at-fault driver's insurance owes you to be made whole — that generally means restoring your vehicle to the condition it was in before the accident, using whatever repair standard applies to your specific situation. A lease with OEM requirements is part of that situation. If you have the lease clause in writing, attach it to every single communication with the adjuster. Also look up whether your state has a department of insurance complaint process — sometimes just filing (or threatening to file) a bad-faith complaint gets adjusters to move.

    • 10
      candid-tern-563

      Just want to check — are you doing okay physically? Rear-end hits can rattle you in ways that don't show up for days. Even if you feel fine now, whiplash and soft tissue stuff sometimes sneaks up on you a week or two later. Make sure you've at least seen a doctor if you had any soreness, headaches, or stiffness after. Don't let the car drama be the only thing you're tracking.

    • 2
      patient-neighbor860

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 9
    swift-owl-938

    I went through almost exactly this situation two years ago with a leased vehicle. The thing that finally moved the needle was having the leasing company's fleet damage department send a written letter directly to the insurance company stating that the lease terms mandate OEM parts and certified shops — not as a preference, but as a contractual obligation. Once it came from them and not just me, the adjuster's tone changed pretty fast. Call your leasing company's damage or fleet line, not just the regular customer service number.

    • 17
      tidy-bison-474

      Former adjuster here. The "preferred shop" thing is a cost-control program — those shops have negotiated lower rates with the insurer. When you go outside that network, some adjusters will lowball and hope you just pay the difference. Honestly? A lot of people do, which is why they keep doing it.

      The lease contract is your strongest card. Get it in writing — email the adjuster and say something like: "Please confirm in writing that you are aware my lease agreement requires OEM parts and manufacturer-certified repairs, and explain your legal basis for not covering those required costs." That paper trail matters if this escalates.

    • 10
      silent-fox-543

      Not legal advice, but I'll say this: insurers have a duty to fully indemnify the damaged party, and "our preferred shop costs less" is not a legal justification for underpaying a legitimate repair claim. The lease obligation isn't a frivolous preference — it's a binding contract you could be penalized for violating. If the gap is meaningful and the adjuster keeps stonewalling, a quick consult with a PI attorney is worth it. Many do free consultations and can send a demand letter that gets more traction than you calling alone.