The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
wise-otter-905

Clipped a curb hard — mechanic quote is wild, not sure if filing a claim is worth it

So I had a rough morning last week. Swerved to avoid a dog that ran into the road, clipped one of those concrete dividers on the edge of the lane, and kept going thinking it was just cosmetic. Took it to a shop yesterday and the guy comes back with this massive estimate — apparently the control arm is bent, there's suspension damage, and one of the wheels is tracking wrong. Didn't even get to bodywork yet.

Visually it honestly doesn't look that bad. Like, there's some scraping on the bumper corner and the wheel well is a little pushed in, but nothing that screams "thousands of dollars." The mechanic is telling me otherwise though, and I kind of believe him because the steering does feel off and there's a weird pull to the right now.

Here's my dilemma: I'm 24, this is my first at-fault anything, and I have no idea how much my rates would jump if I file. My deductible is $1,000. The quote is several times that, so on paper it makes sense to file — but I've heard horror stories about premiums spiking for years after a single-car claim and I don't know if the math actually works out.

Has anyone been in a similar spot? Did you file or just pay out of pocket? Did your rates go up a ton? I'm also wondering if I should get a second opinion on the repair estimate before I do anything. Just want to make sure I'm not getting taken advantage of or making a decision I'll regret for the next few years.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 20
    mellow-mole-583

    One upside here: if you do file and they total it or the repair is substantial, you might end up with a fully inspected, properly repaired car with documentation — which actually helps resale value compared to an undocumented cash repair. Just something to consider.

    • 1
      weary-rider167

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 16
    clear-marmot-971

    Get a second opinion on the repair first. Always. Then call your agent and ask specifically what a comprehensive or collision claim does to your rate tier. You need actual numbers, not guesses, before you decide. Don't file or don't-file based on vibes.

    • 19
      gentle-tern-532

      Not directly related to the insurance question, but — if the steering is pulling and the suspension is damaged, please don't drive it more than you absolutely have to until it's fixed. I've seen people delay repairs on steering/suspension issues and then end up in a second, worse accident. The car is telling you something is wrong.

    • 9
      patient-crow-483

      What kind of coverage do you actually have — is it full coverage with collision, or something else? And do you know your rate class currently? Because "rates will go up a lot" is super vague and really depends on your insurer, your state, and your current tier. Without knowing those details it's hard to say whether filing makes sense or not.

  • 14
    wise-kestrel-513

    Just be careful — once you officially open a claim it's on your record even if you end up not using it at some places. I'd confirm that with your specific insurer before you even make the call. Some companies treat an inquiry as a claim, some don't. Read the fine print or ask in writing.

  • 12
    candid-crane-928

    Former adjuster here. A few things: first, suspension and alignment damage is almost always worse than it looks externally, so don't dismiss the mechanic's estimate just because the cosmetics seem minor. Second, rate increases after a first single-car claim vary a LOT by insurer and state — some companies barely move on it, others hammer you. Call your agent (not the claims line) and ask them to run the numbers before you file. That's not the same as filing. Also, 100% get a second estimate. Shops vary wildly on this kind of repair.

    • 8
      restless-offramp580

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

    • 4
      honest-traveler943

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

  • 10
    humble-finch-889

    I was in almost this exact spot about two years ago — single car incident, suspension damage that looked minor but wasn't. I called my insurer just to ask hypothetically what a claim might do to my rates before actually filing, and honestly that conversation was really helpful. Some companies let you get a soft answer without it being a formal claim. Worth a shot before you commit either way.

  • 10
    daring-raven-209

    Ugh, that's such a stressful situation. The fact that it feels off when you're driving is what would worry me most. Like whatever you decide on the insurance side, please get that sorted mechanically sooner rather than later. Your safety isn't worth saving a few hundred bucks.