The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insuranceswift-seal-330

Insurance gave me a repair check — do I have to spend every single dollar of it?

So I got rear-ended about three weeks ago and the other driver's insurance accepted liability pretty quickly. They sent an adjuster out, he wrote up an estimate, and they cut me a check based on that number.

Here's my situation: I have a trusted mechanic I've been going to for like eight years. My guy looked at the car and said he can fix everything the adjuster flagged for noticeably less than what the check covers. The insurance company kept pushing me toward one of their "preferred" shops but I'm not doing that — I've heard too many stories about those places rushing jobs.

My question is: if my mechanic comes in under the estimate amount, do I have to send the leftover back to the insurance company? Like is there some clause somewhere that says the full amount has to go toward repairs and I need to provide receipts? Or is that check basically mine to use as I see fit once they've paid out?

I'm not trying to scam anyone — the car is genuinely getting fixed, and fixed properly. I'm just wondering if I pocket the difference or if that's somehow insurance fraud or something.

Also worth mentioning: the car is fully paid off, no lien holder involved, so there's no bank in the middle demanding anything.

Anyone been in this situation? Really appreciate any real-world experience here.

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10 replies

  • 20
    gentle-marmot-380

    I was in almost this exact spot two years ago. My car was paid off, I used my own shop, and he came in under the estimate. I kept the difference and never heard a word from the insurance company. Nobody asked for receipts, nobody followed up. I think the key is that the car actually gets repaired — you're not just pocketing money and driving around with damage still on it.

  • 10
    clear-raven-628

    Honestly, when a car has no lienholder, we had very little leverage or reason to demand receipts after cutting a check. The estimate is our calculation of what the damage should cost — it's not a voucher system. Where it gets complicated is if the damage turns out to be worse once your mechanic gets into it (called a supplement), because then you'd go back to them for more. But if your guy does it cheaper? In my experience that money was yours. The preferred shop thing is purely about the insurer's convenience and cycle time, not your obligation.

  • 7
    keen-bison-636

    Just a heads up — make sure you get a written repair invoice from your mechanic showing what was done. Even if nobody asks for it now, if anything comes up later related to this accident (injury claim, lawsuit, whatever) you want documentation that the vehicle was actually repaired. Don't give them any ammunition to argue the car wasn't fixed.

  • 11
    warm-marmot-374

    The short version: with no lien on the vehicle, the insurance company generally has no contractual right to demand you spend every dollar of that check at a specific place or even prove you spent it all. Their duty was to compensate you for the loss. That said, if there's any language in the claim settlement paperwork you signed, read it carefully. Some releases have specific repair acknowledgment language. Not telling you what's legal — just saying check what you actually signed before assuming anything.

  • 10
    hearty-grouse-175

    Get the car fixed, get a receipt, keep the rest. That's it. You're not defrauding anyone — the insurer priced the repair at market rate and you found someone who charges less. That's called being a smart consumer.

    • 6
      soft-spoken-road-soul913

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 20
    calm-heron-187

    Quick question though — did the insurance company send you the check directly, or did they send it jointly payable to you and a shop? Because if it's made out to you alone, you have a lot more flexibility. If a shop name is on there too it gets messier. Also curious what "noticeably less" means — if it's a small gap that's one thing, but if your mechanic is quoting way under, make sure he's actually fixing everything on that estimate and not skipping steps.

  • 9
    patient-swan-510

    A little off your direct question but — you said you got rear-ended. Are you feeling okay physically? Rear impacts can do sneaky things to your neck and back that don't show up for days or even a couple weeks. Please don't let the property damage process distract you from checking in on yourself. Seen too many people settle everything and then realize months later they're still hurting.

  • 13
    mellow-hare-343

    Honestly this is kind of a best-case scenario for a bad situation — liability accepted fast, check in hand, and a mechanic you actually trust doing the work. A lot of people on here are fighting just to get the other side to admit fault. Use your guy, get it fixed right, and move on with a little extra in your pocket. You earned that stress-free outcome.

    • 0
      gentle-commuter215

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