The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
humble-swift-633

Loaner car scratch turned into a huge bill — charges don't even match what I hit

So I'm kind of spiraling right now and hoping someone here has dealt with something similar.

A few months ago I borrowed a loaner vehicle from a dealership while my car was being serviced. On my way back, I bumped a concrete parking barrier in a lot — super low speed, maybe 10–12 mph. There was a small dent and scuff on one panel near the front bumper. No airbag deployment, no structural crumpling, nothing dramatic. I told the dealership right away because I'm not the type to hide stuff like that.

Here's the problem: I only had liability coverage at the time (I know, I know — lesson brutally learned). The dealership's insurance paid for the repairs, but now they're coming after me for subrogation. I figured I'd owe something reasonable — fix the dent, maybe the paint. Fine.

But the invoice they sent me? It has line items I genuinely don't understand. We're talking suspension components, interior sensor replacements, and a few other things that have nothing to do with a low-speed parking lot bump on one panel. I've asked twice now for someone to explain how these repairs connect to my specific incident and they keep stonewalling me or just resending the same invoice.

I'm a grad student, I'm broke, and this bill is basically four months of rent for me. I'm not trying to dodge responsibility — I genuinely want to pay what I actually owe. But I'm not going to just sign off on charges that feel made up.

Has anyone fought back on something like this? Do I have any real options or am I just stuck?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 15
    quiet-elk-365

    Oh man, I went through almost exactly this after a fender bender in a rental. They tried to bill me for a brake system overhaul on a car I barely tapped. What helped me was demanding a copy of the actual repair order from the shop — not just the invoice the dealership or their insurer sent me. The repair order shows what the technician actually wrote down and why. Sometimes there's a huge gap between that and what they're billing you for. Definitely ask for it in writing.

    • 10
      silent-crow-304

      A few practical things worth knowing: subrogation is a legal claim, which means they actually have to prove damages and causation if it ever went in front of a judge. Sending a written dispute letter — certified mail, keep a copy — asking for itemized documentation linking each repair to your specific incident puts them on notice that you're not just going to roll over. It also creates a paper trail if this escalates. Don't communicate by phone only.

    • 5
      calm-survivor296

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 14
    brave-marten-491

    Do NOT just pay that bill without pushing back hard. Subrogation departments are counting on people like us to panic and write a check. They send inflated invoices all the time knowing most people won't question them. You have every right to dispute specific line items and demand documentation proving those repairs were caused by your incident. If they can't show causation, they have a weak case.

  • 20
    bright-wolf-795

    Former adjuster here — this is more common than people realize, especially with dealership loaners. Sometimes shops will bundle deferred maintenance or pre-existing wear into an accident claim because it's easier to get paid that way. The subrogation team may not even know what's legitimate; they're often just collecting on whatever the repair facility submitted.

    Your best move is to request the full claim file including the damage inspection photos taken before they gave you the loaner. Dealers are supposed to document the vehicle's condition at checkout. If those photos don't show prior damage to the areas they're now billing for — great, that's on you. But if they never documented it properly, that's a real problem for their claim.

    • 18
      clever-newt-697

      Stop answering their calls and put everything in writing from this point forward. Email only, or certified mail. Ask for the pre-inspection report, the shop's repair order, and a written explanation of how each line item connects to your accident. Give them a deadline to respond — two weeks is reasonable. If they can't back up the charges, you've got leverage. If they can, at least you know what you're actually dealing with.

    • 4
      weathered-backseat413

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

  • 15
    calm-sparrow-744

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the burden is generally on the party pursuing subrogation to prove the damages they're claiming were actually caused by the incident in question. 'We fixed it and here's the total' isn't the same as proving causation. If the numbers are significant enough, a free consult with a PI attorney is worth your time — some will look at subrogation defense situations too. The letter alone from a lawyer sometimes makes these things get a lot more reasonable real fast.

    • 5
      sharp-wren-367

      I don't know much about the legal side but the stress of something like this is genuinely awful, especially when you're already stretched thin. Please make sure you're taking care of yourself through this — it's easy to let financial anxiety tank your sleep and focus. Whatever happens with the bill, it's solvable. You reached out, you're asking questions, that's the right move.

    • 10
      weary-survivor876

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 10
    plain-newt-649

    Quick question — did you sign anything when you took the loaner? Like a damage waiver or a contract with terms about liability? Some dealerships have language in there that's pretty aggressive about who's responsible for any repairs made to the vehicle during the loan period, even pre-existing stuff. Worth re-reading whatever paperwork you signed before deciding how to respond to them.