The Shoulder
The Shoulder
60
cool-crane-860

Insurer's preferred shop suddenly changed their damage assessment — is this even legal?

So I got rear-ended about three weeks ago while stopped at a red light. Other driver took off — full hit and run. Luckily a witness stuck around and got a partial plate, so we have something, but it's been a mess.

I filed through my own uninsured motorist coverage and my adjuster told me to take my car to one of their "approved" repair shops. Fine, whatever. I went, the guy walked around the car with me for a good 20 minutes, pointed out the damaged rear panel, said the quarter panel was too far gone to repair safely and would need full replacement, and told me he'd have a written estimate ready by end of day.

That estimate never showed up.

Four days later I finally get an email — and the write-up looks completely different from what he told me in person. Suddenly it's all "surface correction" and "blending" instead of replacement. The payout my insurer approved based on this revised estimate is laughably low. Like, it wouldn't even cover half the parts alone.

Here's the kicker: I took my car to two other shops — neither of them affiliated with my insurance — and BOTH said the same thing the first guy told me in person: the panel needs to come off and be replaced, no question.

I feel like the shop changed their tune after talking to the adjuster. Is that a thing that actually happens? And what's my move here? Do I just keep pushing back with the independent estimates, or is there a formal process I should be following? I don't want to lawyer up over this if I don't have to, but I'm also not going to roll over.

10replies

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

10 replies

  • 24
    careful-dove-643

    Yeah, this absolutely happens. Preferred shops have financial relationships with carriers — they get volume referrals in exchange for keeping estimates in line with what the insurer wants to pay. The guy probably told you the truth when you were standing there, then got a call or checked the claim notes and "revised" his assessment. It's not always explicit pressure, sometimes the shops just know where the ceiling is. Get everything in writing from your independent shops and submit them formally as a counter-estimate. Don't just email them — call and ask to open a supplement claim or request an appraisal process if your state allows it.

    • 2
      curious-parent722

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

  • 12
    cool-owl-910

    This is the preferred shop game in a nutshell. Your insurer didn't send you there for convenience — they sent you there because that shop plays ball. Two independent shops agreeing with the original verbal assessment is solid ammunition. Do NOT let them close this claim before you push back hard.

  • 9
    quiet-grouse-650

    Almost identical thing happened to me after a side-swipe. Insurer's shop magically found a way to buff out damage that two other places said needed a full door replacement. I submitted the independent estimates and wrote a complaint email directly to my insurer's claims manager — not the adjuster, the manager. Claim got reopened within a week. Squeaky wheel, seriously.

  • 7
    wise-lynx-258

    A few things worth knowing: most states give you the right to choose your own repair shop regardless of what your insurer "recommends." They can't force you to use their preferred vendor. Also, if there's a significant dispute over the repair scope, your policy likely has an appraisal clause — both sides hire their own appraiser and if they disagree, a neutral umpire decides. Look for that section in your declarations or coverage documents. It's a formal way to escalate without immediately going to litigation.

  • 20
    clear-grouse-463

    Not legal advice, but what you're describing — an insurer steering you to a shop that then underestimates damage — can sometimes cross into bad faith territory depending on your state's laws. If your insurer continues to lowball after you provide multiple independent estimates supporting the higher repair cost, it may be worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney. Many handle these on contingency so there's no upfront cost to you.

  • 7
    tidy-finch-550

    Not my usual lane but I wanted to say — please don't forget to check in on yourself physically too. Rear-end impacts can do soft tissue stuff that doesn't show up for days. If you have any neck stiffness, headaches, or back aches, get seen now rather than later. Documentation of injuries right after the accident matters if anything develops down the road.

  • 20
    silent-dove-039

    Submit the two independent estimates in writing to your adjuster today. CC their supervisor if you can find the name. State clearly that you do not authorize repairs based on the current estimate and that you're disputing it. Keep every email. If they stonewall you, file a complaint with your state's department of insurance — it's free and carriers take those seriously.

  • 8
    brave-lynx-460

    One thing I'd want to know — did you get anything in writing from the shop during that original visit? Even a text, a business card with notes, anything? Because "he said one thing in person" is harder to stand on than a paper trail. The independent estimates help a lot, but if you have literally anything documenting what the shop originally told you, hold onto it tight.

    • 8
      weathered-sidewalk991

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.