The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
Car accidentsbold-crow-969

Got talked into a sketchy 'mobile scratch repair' guy after my accident — did I just ruin my claim?

So I'm kind of embarrassed to even post this but here goes.

About six weeks ago someone backed into my car in a grocery store parking lot. The other driver admitted fault right there on the spot, we exchanged info, and their insurance accepted liability pretty quickly. I had a noticeable crease along my rear quarter panel and some paint damage.

Here's where I messed up. I kept putting off going to an actual body shop because I work weird hours and kept telling myself I'd do it 'next week.' Then last Saturday a guy approaches me in a gas station parking lot with a little laminated card, says he does 'paintless dent removal and touch-up' on the spot, cheap, fast, looks factory. I figured — okay, why not, the damage is pretty minor visually.

Long story short: it looks worse than before. He smeared some kind of filler compound over the crease, it's already bubbling, and the color match is way off. And I paid him cash so I have basically nothing to show for it.

Now I'm panicking. The at-fault driver's insurance still hasn't cut me a check for the property damage. Will they still cover a proper repair at a real shop even though this guy touched the car? Or did I accidentally void some part of my claim by letting an unlicensed person work on it?

I know I should have just gone to a real shop from the start. Hindsight and all that. But I'm hoping this isn't as catastrophic as it feels right now. Anyone dealt with something like this?

11replies

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

11 replies

  • 22
    bold-finch-655

    Oh man, I cringed reading this because I almost fell for the exact same thing outside a car wash last year. I didn't go through with it luckily, but I've heard from others who did. From what I understand, the at-fault party's insurance owes you for the full cost to restore your car to its pre-accident condition — which now arguably includes fixing whatever that guy did on top of the original damage. Get a real shop to document everything with photos before anything else.

  • 18
    wise-wren-894

    Don't volunteer this information to the adjuster unless they specifically ask or it comes up during the repair estimate. You're not obligated to walk them through every decision you made after the accident. Just get to a reputable body shop, let them write up what needs to be fixed, and let that estimate do the talking. Adjusters look for any reason to reduce a payout — giving them extra ammunition isn't in your interest.

    • 14
      keen-hare-754

      Stop overthinking it. Go to a body shop tomorrow — not a chain, ideally an independent shop with good reviews that does insurance work regularly. Tell them what happened, show them the damage, and let them write the estimate. That estimate is your leverage. The claim isn't dead.

    • 22
      spry-swift-538

      Not legal advice, but generally speaking, a claimant's obligation is to mitigate damages — meaning avoid making things unnecessarily worse. Whether the botched repair complicates your claim depends a lot on how it's documented and presented. If the body shop's estimate clearly links all current damage to the original incident, most carriers will work with that. If the adjuster pushes back hard and tries to lowball you, that's when talking to a PI attorney (usually free consult) becomes worth your time.

    • 0
      weary-walker583

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 8
    kind-marmot-816

    I worked in auto claims for several years so let me give you the inside view. The liability doesn't just disappear because someone else touched the car after the fact. What can happen is the adjuster tries to separate the damage — like, 'we'll pay for the original crease but not the botched repair.' A good body shop estimator will write a comprehensive supplement that explains why all the current damage traces back to the original impact. Get everything photographed right now, today, before it changes any further.

  • 21
    warm-vole-106

    From a process standpoint, a few things worth doing immediately:

    1. Take timestamped photos of the current state of the damage from multiple angles. 2. If you have any texts or voicemails from the parking lot guy, save them. 3. Get at least two written estimates from licensed body shops — not verbal quotes.

    The at-fault carrier's obligation is to make you whole, meaning return the car to its pre-accident condition. The botched repair is arguably part of what they now need to account for. This isn't hopeless at all, just needs to be documented carefully.

  • 7
    swift-seal-781

    Not my usual lane since I'm more the 'are you physically okay' person, but I'll say this — don't let the stress of this eat at you too much. You made a decision that felt reasonable at the time and it didn't work out. That happens. Focus on what you can control right now, which is documenting and getting a real professional involved.

    • 14
      clever-marmot-453

      Few questions that might matter here: Did the other driver's insurance send an adjuster out to inspect and photograph the damage before this repair attempt? If they already have a documented baseline of the original damage on file, that actually helps you a lot. Also, did you sign anything with that mobile repair guy or just hand over cash?

  • 5
    gentle-raven-548

    Please don't beat yourself up — those parking lot guys are convincing, that's literally their whole thing. You were in a stressful situation and someone offered what sounded like an easy fix. You're not the first person this has happened to. Just focus on what's next and you'll get it sorted out. 💙

    • 8
      tired-traveler762

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.