The Shoulder
The Shoulder
65
candid-badger-626

Insurer wants to use cheap aftermarket parts on my car — I'm not at fault, why am I eating this cost?

I am so frustrated right now and just need to vent and get some guidance from people who've been through this.

So a few weeks ago someone ran a red light and T-boned me. Their insurance accepted 100% liability pretty quickly, which I thought meant things would go smoothly. Ha.

They sent out an estimate based on photos — not even a real in-person inspection — and cut me a check. I brought my car to the shop I trust (not one of their "preferred" shops, which I've heard are just shops that cut deals with the insurer). When my shop actually got in there, they flagged that several of the parts on the estimate were aftermarket, not OEM.

I reached out to the insurance company in writing saying I want my car restored to pre-accident condition with OEM parts. The rep I eventually got on the phone basically told me that's just not how they do it, and if I want factory parts the difference comes out of my pocket.

I am not at fault. Not even a little. Their driver caused this. Why am I being asked to subsidize repairs on a car I didn't damage?

I asked for that position in writing and — surprise — crickets so far.

My car isn't some beater. It's relatively new and I've maintained it religiously. Aftermarket parts can affect resale value, fit, safety ratings, all of it. This feels completely wrong.

Has anyone fought back on this and won? What actually works? Do I need a lawyer or can I handle this myself?

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10 replies

  • 20
    clear-crane-513

    I went through almost the exact same thing last year. They tried to sneak aftermarket bumper components into my estimate and acted like it was totally normal. I pushed back hard in writing, CC'd a lawyer I'd consulted, and suddenly they found OEM parts available. Don't accept the first answer — it's almost like a test to see if you'll just roll over.

  • 12
    curious-hare-258

    Former adjuster here. Honestly? That "aftermarket is our policy" line is a negotiating opener, not a hard rule. A lot of insurers use aftermarket parts as a default to save money, but they absolutely can be pushed off it — especially on a newer vehicle. The key is documenting everything. If you got that answer verbally, keep asking for it in writing. They often won't put it in writing because they know it looks bad. Also look up whether your state has any regulations about restoring a vehicle to "like kind and quality" — many states do, and insurers know it.

    • 0
      gentle-traveler273

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 12
    clever-elk-344

    This is the playbook. They lowball, they deflect, they hope you're tired and just cash the check. The preferred shop network exists to keep costs down for them, not to protect you. Keep every email, note every phone call with the date and rep's name, and do not let them close the claim until you're actually satisfied.

    • 20
      clever-seal-534

      A few practical things: First, look up your state's insurance regulations — specifically anything around "like kind and quality" repairs for newer vehicles. Some states have explicit rules that work in your favor here. Second, your shop can write a supplement request directly to the insurer if they find the aftermarket parts are inadequate. Third, if the insurer is stonewalling on putting their position in writing, that's worth noting — it can matter later if you escalate to your state's insurance commissioner. Filing a complaint there is free and sometimes lights a fire under adjusters faster than anything else.

    • 15
      quick-seal-309

      Not legal advice, but this kind of dispute is exactly where a quick consult with a PI attorney can be useful — many will do a free call. At minimum they can tell you whether your state's laws give you leverage on the OEM parts issue. Also worth knowing: if the at-fault driver's insurer is jerking you around, your own collision or uninsured/underinsured coverage (if you have it) sometimes creates a second avenue, and your insurer then has to fight theirs. Just something to explore.

    • 3
      soft-spoken-co-pilot620

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 15
    gentle-beaver-827

    Slightly different angle — if you had any physical symptoms after the crash, even minor ones like neck stiffness or headaches, please get checked out and document it. People often focus entirely on the car damage and then realize weeks later they're still sore. Property damage and bodily injury are separate parts of a claim and you don't want to accidentally close one before you understand the other.

  • 16
    calm-seal-057

    Three things. One: stop accepting verbal answers, everything in writing from here on. Two: file a complaint with your state insurance commissioner — it's a few minutes online and adjusters hate it. Three: get at least one attorney consult before you sign or accept anything. You're not overreacting, this is exactly the situation where people get steamrolled because they don't know their options.

  • 12
    wise-badger-685

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this on top of the stress of the accident itself. It's just wrong that the system makes you fight for basic fairness when you didn't do anything. Keep pushing — you deserve to have your car back the way it was.