The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
spry-crow-122

Fleet truck's insurer billed me 2x a fair estimate — and the surcharge seems completely made up?

So I tapped a parked commercial van in a parking garage a few months back. Barely a scratch and a small crease on the rear quarter panel — I'm not downplaying it, it was real damage, but nothing dramatic. I left a note, the driver called me, I gave my info, all good. I even got a quote from a reputable mobile repair guy pretty quickly so I'd know what I was dealing with.

Then nothing for like six weeks. Then out of nowhere I get a letter from some third-party fleet management company — apparently the van is leased through them and they carry the insurance, not the business I originally spoke to. Fine. Except they've already had it repaired without telling me, and now they're sending me an invoice demanding I pay them back directly.

The number on that invoice is almost double what my independent estimate was. I took a copy of their itemized bill to two different body shops to get their read on it. Both of them flagged the same line item — a "high-strength exotic alloy" surcharge that accounts for a huge chunk of the total. The problem? That panel is plain steel. I cross-referenced the part number through the manufacturer's parts catalog online. Steel. A service advisor at a dealership confirmed it too without me even leading the question.

So now I'm sitting here wondering — am I actually on the hook for an inflated bill that includes charges for materials that literally weren't used on my repair? Do I just pay it to make it go away? Push back in writing? Get my own insurance involved even though my rates could go up?

Has anyone dealt with fleet insurers pulling something like this? I feel like I'm being taken advantage of and I don't know where to start.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 17
    cool-wren-383

    Not legal advice, but the concept of 'betterment' and 'reasonable repair costs' is really important here. Your liability, if any, is for reasonable restoration — not for whatever a fleet account happened to pay a shop that may have overbilled. The fraudulent surcharge angle (charging for materials that weren't used) could actually be significant. Might be worth a free consult just to understand your options. Many PI attorneys also handle property damage disputes.

    • 7
      daring-beaver-608

      Don't pay it. Write them a formal letter disputing the charges, attach your two independent estimates, attach your parts catalog screenshots, and tell them you're prepared to pay a reasonable amount for actual documented damage but not inflated or unsupported line items. Be polite but firm. Then loop in your own insurance carrier and let them know what's happening — that's literally what you pay premiums for.

    • 4
      curious-wanderer233

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 15
    wise-badger-964

    Oh man, this is giving me flashbacks. I bumped a rental car in a lot two years ago and the rental company's damage recovery unit sent me an invoice with a bunch of fees I'd never heard of — including a 'loss of use' charge for a car they said was back in rotation three days later. I pushed back in writing with my own documentation and they dropped almost a third of it. Don't just pay it. Paper trail everything.

    • 18
      quiet-swan-829

      A couple of things worth knowing: first, in most states you have the right to dispute a third-party damage claim and request documentation supporting their charges — including repair records and parts invoices. They should be able to show exactly what materials were used. Second, you generally aren't automatically liable for whatever a third party decided to spend on a repair; you're liable for the reasonable cost of restoring the vehicle to its prior condition. Those are different things. Worth talking to someone who knows your state's rules before you write any checks.

    • 19
      clear-kestrel-254

      This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that they never even gave you a chance to arrange the repair yourself and then handed you a bill afterward feels really unfair. Please don't just pay it to make the anxiety stop — you clearly did your homework and have real evidence on your side.

  • 14
    swift-lynx-133

    Fleet insurers do this constantly. They know most people will just panic and pay rather than fight it. The surcharge thing is a classic move — throw in a technical-sounding line item that most people won't know how to challenge. You already did the hard work by verifying the material. Now document ALL of it: screenshots of the parts catalog, the name and title of whoever at the dealership confirmed it, and both independent estimates. Send your dispute in writing, certified mail, and keep copies of everything. Do not pay anything yet.

    • 20
      hearty-swift-929

      I worked in commercial auto claims for years. What you're describing — a third-party fleet insurer billing you directly for a repair you had no input on — is actually pretty common with leased commercial vehicles, but the billing practices can get really sloppy. Shops know fleet accounts pay without much scrutiny, so line items sometimes get... creative. The fact that you have two independent shops AND manufacturer documentation calling out that surcharge is genuinely strong. If you put that in writing to them, there's a decent chance they negotiate down without you even needing a lawyer.

    • 8
      hopeful-driver814

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

  • 9
    genuine-mole-022

    Quick question — did you ever actually go through your own insurance when this happened, or did you try to handle it entirely out of pocket? Because if your insurer doesn't even know this is happening, that could complicate things. Also, do you have anything in writing from the original contact, or was it all phone calls? That might matter if this escalates.

    • 0
      weary-commuter529

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

    • 0
      plainspoken-offramp246

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.