The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
Property damageclear-fox-169

Followed every insurance rule after my crash — now somehow I owe the body shop money??

I am so frustrated right now I don't even know where to start.

About four months ago I got hit from behind at a red light by someone who ran straight into me. Not my fault at all — there were witnesses, a police report, the whole thing. The other driver's insurance accepted liability pretty quickly, which I thought meant the hard part was over.

I did everything "right." I used the repair shop they pointed me to. I filled out every form. I returned every call. I even kept a little notebook with dates and names of who I talked to.

The repairs took almost three weeks. During that time I had a rental, and I won't get into all the drama around that reimbursement, but let's just say what I paid and what I got back were two very different numbers.

Then last week — WEEKS after my car was back in my driveway and I thought this whole nightmare was behind me — I get a voicemail from the body shop saying I have an outstanding balance. A big one.

Apparently the insurance company sent part of the repair payment to me early in the process (I did deposit that check, thinking it was just how things worked), and then paid the shop separately later — but there was some gap in the supplements or something, and now the shop says I owe them the difference.

I never got a single clear explanation of how the money was supposed to flow. Nobody told me I was supposed to hold that first check and hand it to the shop. I'm not a claims adjuster. I'm just a person who got hit.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? What did you actually do?

12replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

12 replies

  • 10
    calm-kestrel-682

    Oh my gosh, this happened to me almost exactly. I deposited a check from the insurance company because I thought it was mine to cover some of my expenses — turns out it was meant to go to the shop as a partial payment. Nobody explained that to me either. I ended up having a really uncomfortable three-way call with the shop and the adjuster to sort it out. It took weeks but we eventually got it resolved without me paying out of pocket. Push back hard and don't just quietly pay it.

    • 10
      careful-wanderer334

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 14
    wise-marten-883

    This is a classic mess that benefits the insurance company. When things are confusing and you're exhausted from dealing with a crash, there's a decent chance you'll just pay whatever bill shows up to make it go away. Don't do that. Make everyone put in writing exactly what was paid, when, and to whom before you hand over a single dollar.

  • 17
    candid-raven-537

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest — the payment flow on these multi-supplement repairs can get genuinely chaotic, and adjusters don't always walk people through it the way they should. What you need to do is request a complete payment ledger from the insurance company showing every check issued, the date, and who it was made out to. The shop should have the same records. Put those two things side by side and find where the discrepancy actually is. A lot of times these "you owe us" calls from shops are legitimate but occasionally there's a check that got applied wrong on their end.

  • 17
    tidy-sparrow-101

    A few things worth doing right away: first, send a written request (email is fine) to the insurance company for an itemized breakdown of every payment made on your claim. Second, ask the body shop for a written invoice showing the total, what's been paid, and what they say is outstanding. Once you have both documents you can actually compare them instead of just taking everyone's word for it. If you spot a discrepancy, you have something concrete to dispute. Don't agree to anything over the phone.

  • 19
    quiet-heron-823

    Not legal advice, but situations like this — where you're caught in the middle of a payment dispute between an insurer and a shop after a not-at-fault accident — can sometimes be resolved by pointing out to the insurance company that it's their approved facility and their payment process that created the confusion. They have some responsibility to clean this up. If the number is large enough and they stonewall you, a free consult with a PI attorney isn't a bad idea just to understand your options.

    • 2
      quiet-wanderer600

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 12
    kind-elk-952

    Don't pay anything yet. Get the records, compare the numbers, and then call the adjuster's supervisor — not the regular adjuster, the supervisor. Be calm but be direct: you followed their process, used their shop, and were never told you were responsible for forwarding payments. That's on them to fix.

  • 5
    curious-heron-980

    This sounds so exhausting on top of already dealing with an accident that wasn't your fault. Please don't let them pressure you into just paying to make it go away. You did nothing wrong here and you deserve to actually understand what happened to your money.

    • 4
      careful-dreamer174

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 18
    tidy-grouse-267

    Quick question — when you got that first check, was it made out to you only, or was the shop listed on it too? Sometimes shops are supposed to co-sign those and that's how the money is supposed to transfer. Just trying to understand the full picture because that detail might matter a lot when you're pushing back.

    • 0
      tired-rider102

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.