The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancewarm-heron-424

Car sat at tow yard for a month, now shop found "pre-existing" damage — insurance won't cover it??

I'm so frustrated right now and honestly starting to feel like I'm being gaslit by everyone involved in this process.

Six weeks ago I got rear-ended at a stoplight — completely not my fault, police report backs me up. My car got towed immediately and I filed a claim. My adjuster confirmed no fault on my end, set me up with a rental, and said everything looked straightforward. Great, right?

Except my car sat at the tow facility for almost four weeks before the repair shop even touched it. Every time I called I got a different excuse — "still in queue," "waiting on appraisal," "invoice processing." I drove past the storage lot once and couldn't even confirm my car was there. The place is basically invisible — no signage, no real web presence, nothing.

Finally the shop gets my car. Three days later they call me and say they've found what they're describing as a "pre-existing crack in the coolant system" and my insurance is now claiming it's unrelated to the collision because the damage is toward the front of the car.

Here's my problem with that: 1. My car had zero warning lights or leaks before the accident — I have maintenance records 2. Nobody inspected or photographed the car before it sat at that lot for a month 3. I have no idea what happened to the vehicle during storage

How is it okay that my car can sit unmonitored for weeks and then suddenly I'm on the hook for "pre-existing" damage? Has anyone dealt with something like this? Do I have any recourse here? I feel like I'm getting squeezed from every direction.

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10 replies

  • 17
    tidy-hare-104

    Oh wow, this is almost exactly what happened to me two years ago. My car sat at a storage yard for three weeks after a side-impact crash, and suddenly the shop found "rust damage" that supposedly made part of my repair non-covered. My adjuster used the same logic — "not related to the impact zone." I pushed back hard, got an independent estimate, and eventually they caved on most of it. Don't just accept their first answer. They're counting on you being too tired to fight it.

    • 14
      patient-kestrel-570

      This is a classic adjuster move and I've seen it come up on here more than once. The longer your car sits unmonitored, the easier it is for them to point at anything they find and call it pre-existing. They know you can't prove what state the car was in during storage. Document everything you have — maintenance records, photos you took before the accident, anything — and do not let them close this claim until you've pushed back formally in writing.

    • 11
      tidy-swift-076

      Pull your maintenance records and get them ready now. If your last oil change or coolant service shows a clean bill of health shortly before the accident, that's your best weapon against a "pre-existing" claim. Also get an independent mechanic — not the shop working with your insurance — to give you their opinion on whether that crack is consistent with impact stress. Second opinions matter here.

    • 9
      hopeful-driver511

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

  • 10
    daring-crow-859

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest with you — the "damage isn't in the impact zone" argument is real but it gets way overused as a denial tactic. Rear-end collisions absolutely can cause fluid system stress toward the front of a vehicle depending on the force and the way the frame absorbs impact. The problem is most people don't challenge it and the file just gets closed.

    What you should do: request a written explanation of denial, ask specifically what inspection was done at intake (before storage), and ask whether any independent appraiser looked at the vehicle. If the answer is no independent appraisal, that's a gap you can push on.

    • 14
      hearty-bison-713

      Not about the car specifically but — are you okay physically? Sometimes in rear-end stops the adrenaline masks stuff for days or even weeks. If you haven't seen a doctor yet or if you've had any neck stiffness, headaches, or back tightness since the accident, please go get checked out. Don't let the car drama distract you from making sure you're documented too.

    • 0
      calm-survivor301

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 10
    hearty-raven-117

    A few practical things worth doing right now:

    • Get everything in writing. Call your adjuster and follow up every phone conversation with an email summarizing what was said.
    • Request the full claim file — you're usually entitled to it, and it'll show what inspections were logged and when.
    • Ask the repair shop directly whether they documented the car's condition on arrival. If they didn't, that's actually useful information for you.

    Also worth knowing: if your insurance carrier won't budge, most states/provinces have a process to file a complaint with the insurance regulator. Sometimes just mentioning that gets things moving. Not legal advice, just process stuff I've picked up.

    • 18
      candid-bison-417

      Genuine question: did you take any photos of the car right after the accident, before it was towed? Even a few phone pics from the scene could help establish baseline condition. Also — did the tow company give you any kind of intake form or condition report when they took the vehicle? Most reputable ones do. If they didn't, that might actually be a point in your favor.

  • 11
    clever-marten-912

    This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that your car just sat there for a MONTH with no proper oversight and now suddenly there's mystery damage feels really wrong. Please don't just let them railroad you — you clearly did everything right on your end.