The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Body shop wants me to sign a form saying I'll pay if insurance doesn't — is that normal??

So I was rear-ended at a red light about three weeks ago. The other driver's insurance accepted liability, no dispute, 100% their fault. I found a reputable body shop near me and dropped my car off for an estimate on the damage to the rear quarter panel and trunk area.

Here's where I got confused: the shop emailed me a form to sign before they'll even start the teardown inspection. The form basically says that if there's any issue with the insurance company paying — for whatever reason — I'm personally responsible for the labor and inspection costs. We're talking potentially hundreds of dollars just to get the estimate done, before a single repair happens.

I've dealt with insurance claims before but I've never seen anything like this. Is this standard shop practice now? It feels weird to me because:

1. I'm not the at-fault party 2. The other driver's insurance has already confirmed they're handling it 3. Why am I on the hook if their insurance drags their feet or disputes something?

Part of me wonders if I should call the at-fault driver's insurance adjuster directly and ask them about this before I sign anything. Or maybe I should just find a different shop?

I don't want to slow down the process — my car has some cosmetic but also functional damage and I want it fixed — but I also don't want to accidentally sign something that leaves me holding a big bill if something goes sideways.

Has anyone dealt with this? Did you just sign it and move on, or did you push back?

9replies

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9 replies

  • 14
    wise-swift-170

    Don't just sign it without talking to the insurance company first. Adjusters love to find technicalities to reduce or delay payments, and if you've signed a form making yourself personally liable, you've just handed them a way out. Get everything confirmed in writing — not just a verbal "yeah we'll cover it" over the phone.

    • 7
      steady-stoat-796

      Call the adjuster. Today. Explain the form, ask them to confirm in an email that teardown inspection costs are covered under the claim regardless of outcome. If they won't do that, find a shop that works directly with that insurance carrier — most big insurers have preferred networks precisely to avoid this kind of mess.

    • 3
      kind-passenger776

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

  • 13
    bold-owl-325

    Honestly, this form is more common than people realize, especially at independent shops. From the insurance side, what you'd want to do is ask the adjuster to either issue a direct payment authorization to the shop covering teardown costs, or at minimum send a written confirmation that teardown is included in the claim scope. Most adjusters will do this without a fight when liability is already accepted. The shop is just protecting themselves — they've probably been stiffed before — but that doesn't mean you have to absorb that risk.

  • 10
    quick-dove-641

    Ugh, this is the last thing you need on top of already dealing with the accident stress. It seems so unfair that you have to navigate all this paperwork when you didn't even cause the crash. I hope you can get it sorted out quickly — you shouldn't have to worry about a surprise bill on top of everything else.

  • 10
    quiet-dove-150

    Not legal advice, but just flagging — since liability has been accepted, you generally have the right to use a shop of your choosing, and the at-fault carrier is obligated to cover reasonable repair-related costs including diagnostic teardowns. If a shop's intake form creates personal financial exposure for you in a claim where you're the non-at-fault party, that's worth a quick conversation with an attorney before signing. Many PI attorneys will answer a question like this in a free consult without any commitment.

  • 8
    warm-dove-844

    I went through something almost identical last year. The shop told me it was their standard policy because they'd gotten burned by insurance companies disputing teardown costs in the past. I actually called the at-fault insurer first, explained the form, and they told me to go ahead and sign — and that they'd cover the teardown as part of the claim. Got it in writing via email from the adjuster. That little step saved me a lot of anxiety. Definitely worth a quick call before you put your name on anything.

    • 21
      mellow-lynx-217

      This is actually a pretty important document to read carefully before signing. A few things to look for: Does it cap your liability at a specific amount, or is it open-ended? Does it define what counts as an 'issue with the insurance company'? Some of these forms are pretty reasonable and narrow; others are really broad. If the language is vague, it's worth asking the shop to clarify or amend it in writing before you sign. Not telling you what to do legally — just saying don't skim it.

  • 8
    keen-hare-271

    Quick question — did you choose this shop yourself, or did the insurance company direct you there? That changes things a bit. If the insurer sent you to them, the shop should already have a working relationship with them and this form situation is a little more questionable. If you picked the shop independently, this is more of a standard CYA move on the shop's part.