The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
Insurancequiet-crane-265

Insurance says my brake damage is 'pre-existing' after a rear-end — do I have any options?

I'm honestly at a loss and could use some perspective from people who've been through something similar.

About three weeks ago I was sitting completely still at a red light when someone slammed into the back of my SUV. Full stop, foot on the brake, nowhere to go. The impact was hard enough to send me into the intersection a few feet.

Obvious stuff: rear end crumpled, tail lights smashed. Not-so-obvious stuff: my brake pedal started feeling spongy immediately after, and there was a grinding noise every time I slowed down that absolutely was not there before. I'd literally had the vehicle in for a routine oil change the week before and the shop noted brakes were in great shape.

Insurance had it towed to some random body shop — not either of the two places I specifically asked for. That shop patched up the cosmetic rear damage and handed it back, saying the brake issue was a pre-existing condition and not covered. They're now pressuring me to sign a release, take the car back, and close out the claim.

Here's why this matters beyond just inconvenience: I drive my elderly mother to dialysis three times a week. It's a long highway trip each way. I genuinely cannot put her in a vehicle with questionable brakes.

I haven't signed anything. I still have the rental. I just feel like I'm being steamrolled and I don't know what leverage, if any, I actually have here.

Has anyone fought back successfully when an insurer called your damage pre-existing? What actually moved the needle for you?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 18
    tidy-marmot-198

    A few things worth knowing: most states require insurers to let you use a repair shop of your choice. If they ignored your two requests and just sent it somewhere convenient for them, that may actually be a violation of your policy terms — worth pulling out your declarations page and reading the appraisal/repair section carefully. Also, 'pre-existing' is a claim they have to actually prove, not just assert. The burden isn't automatically on you.

    • 5
      calm-parent584

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 15
    silent-wren-502

    Three steps: (1) Get an independent mechanic to inspect the brakes and give you a written report TODAY. (2) Send the insurer a written message — email so there's a timestamp — stating you dispute the pre-existing determination and are seeking a second opinion. (3) Do not return the rental or sign anything until step 1 is done. Everything else flows from having that independent documentation in hand.

    • 5
      steady-wanderer597

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 14
    spry-owl-156

    Quick question — when you say the brakes felt 'spongy' right after, did you document that at the scene? Like did you mention it to the other driver, the responding officer, or anyone? I'm not doubting you, I just know that the insurer is going to ask why brake issues weren't flagged in any initial accident report if they're claiming it came out of nowhere.

  • 13
    silent-badger-495

    I'm so sorry you're going through this on top of everything else with your mom's care. That's an enormous amount of stress. Please don't let them rush you — you have every right to take the time to make sure this is actually resolved safely before you close it out.

  • 10
    sharp-fox-840

    The dialysis trip detail is really important and you should put it in writing to the insurer. Not just for emotional reasons — it establishes that safe, reliable transportation is a medical necessity in your specific situation. If something happened on one of those trips in a vehicle with compromised brakes that they signed off on, the liability picture would look very different. Document everything.

    • 2
      quiet-traveler339

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 8
    warm-mole-739

    The release paperwork showing up this fast is a red flag. They're hoping you're stressed, need your car back, and will just sign. The moment you do, they're done with you legally. They know exactly what they're doing. Don't let the rental car pressure get to you either — that's a deliberate squeeze.

  • 6
    quiet-fox-984

    Do NOT sign that release. I made the mistake of signing too early after my accident and it was basically game over. Once you sign, you're telling them you're satisfied and you waive almost everything going forward. Hold the line until you're actually satisfied with the repairs.

    • 16
      genuine-owl-505

      I used to work claims and I'll be straight with you — sending your vehicle to a shop you didn't request, then using that shop's assessment to deny related damage, is a pretty common way to lowball outcomes. The shop they chose has a business relationship with the insurer. That doesn't automatically mean they're lying, but it does mean their incentives aren't exactly aligned with you getting a full repair.

      Your best move is to get an independent inspection from a mechanic of YOUR choosing — pay out of pocket if you have to — and get it in writing that the brake condition is consistent with rear-end trauma. That documentation changes the conversation entirely.

    • 14
      candid-finch-781

      Not legal advice, but this pattern — adjuster pressures quick release, calls disputed damage pre-existing, ignores your shop preferences — is something attorneys who handle first-party insurance disputes see constantly. If you have documentation that your brakes were inspected and fine shortly before the accident, that's genuinely useful. Might be worth a free consult before you sign a single thing.