The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Insurancehearty-swift-696

Lease company wants me to pay the repair gap after at-fault driver's insurance came up short — is this legal??

Still kind of in disbelief this is happening so bear with me.

My husband got rear-ended pretty badly about eight months into our car lease — completely not his fault, the other driver admitted it at the scene and their insurance accepted liability right away. Because of the lease agreement we signed, the leasing company required repairs be done at one specific certified shop. Not a dealership nearby either — the closest approved place was nearly three hours away. We had zero say in it.

The repair ended up being a big job. The at-fault driver's insurance paid out what they said was their "reasonable and customary" amount, but the approved shop charged significantly more than that. There was a gap between what insurance covered and what the shop billed.

Here's where it gets infuriating. The lease ended a few months after the car went into the shop. The leasing company took the vehicle back — we never even saw it again. We had no ability to negotiate the repair bill, find a different shop, or do anything. It was completely out of our hands.

Now the finance company that holds the lease paper is sending us collection notices for the difference between what the shop charged and what insurance paid. We're talking about a real chunk of money.

I feel like we're being punished for someone else hitting my husband. We didn't pick the shop. We didn't approve the repair costs. We never even got the car back.

Has anyone dealt with anything like this? Do we have any leverage here, or are we just stuck?

14replies

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14 replies

  • 8
    patient-beaver-315

    Oh wow, this is almost exactly what happened to me except with a financed vehicle instead of a lease. The lender required a specific shop, the at-fault insurance lowballed the payout, and suddenly I'm the one getting letters. It is absolute garbage. I ended up having to get an attorney involved just to get anyone to take it seriously. Don't just pay it and move on — push back.

    • 20
      quick-swift-080

      I used to work claims and honestly the gap between what a certified/OEM shop charges and what a standard insurer will approve is a super common friction point — especially with luxury or leased vehicles that require specific shops. The at-fault insurer's job is to make their insured whole, not to match whatever a premium shop bills. That said, you had no choice in the shop, which is a really important fact. That changes the equities here significantly in my opinion.

  • 15
    candid-mole-450

    That "reasonable and customary" language the at-fault insurer used is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. Insurers use that framing to justify underpaying, and then somehow the shortfall magically becomes YOUR problem. They know most people will just pay it rather than fight. Don't assume that number was final or accurate.

    • 0
      restless-road-soul834

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

  • 13
    sharp-hare-601

    A few things worth thinking about: First, the at-fault driver's insurance owes for the reasonable cost of repair — if the only shop you were contractually allowed to use charged more, there's an argument that amount IS reasonable for your situation. Second, the lease company directing you to that shop and then repossessing the vehicle before the dispute was resolved could matter. You may have a subrogation or indemnification angle. Definitely worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney to understand your options.

    • 6
      weathered-overpass727

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 9
    mellow-fox-490

    Not legal advice, but the core question here is whether you were truly a party to the repair contract in a meaningful way, or whether the lease company essentially stepped in and took over. If you never signed off on the shop's estimate and the lender directed the whole thing, it's worth arguing you shouldn't be on the hook for a billing dispute you had no power over. The collection notice doesn't mean you legally owe it — those are two different things. Talk to a PI lawyer before you pay a single dollar.

  • 20
    candid-elk-017

    Do NOT pay this yet. Seriously. Send a written dispute to the finance company — certified mail — stating you contest the debt and want verification of the full billing chain. That buys you time and puts them on notice. Meanwhile, go back to the at-fault driver's insurer in writing and make the case that their payout was insufficient given your contractual repair constraints. Paper trail everything.

    • 2
      weary-walker497

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 18
    bold-otter-071

    This makes me so angry on your behalf. You did everything right — your husband wasn't at fault, you followed the lease rules, and now you're getting collection notices? The system really does feel rigged sometimes. Please don't just let this go. Even if it takes some effort to fight it, you shouldn't have to absorb someone else's mistake financially.

    • 8
      thankful-late-shift823

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 11
    wise-wolf-281

    Few questions before I'd form an opinion: Did you have gap insurance or any lease-end protection through your own auto policy? Did your own insurer get involved at all, or did you handle everything directly through the at-fault driver's carrier? Sometimes people skip their own insurer to avoid a rate hike and it ends up costing them leverage they didn't realize they had.

  • 12
    keen-finch-307

    Was your husband injured in the rear-end collision too, or just the car? Asking because if there were any injuries — even soft tissue stuff that felt minor at the time — that's a separate track from the property damage and might actually be the more important claim here. Just don't want that to get lost in the noise of the repair bill fight.

    • 0
      calm-neighbor557

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.