The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Mechanic refusing to release my car unless I pay him cash — can he actually do that??

I genuinely don't know where to turn right now so I'm hoping someone here has dealt with something like this.

Back story: I got rear-ended a few months ago — totally not my fault, other driver blew through a stop sign and hit me pretty hard. I filed a claim with the at-fault driver's insurance, and I took my car to a shop I'd used once before and had a decent experience with. Felt like a safe choice. I was wrong.

Ever since the car went in, it's been a nightmare. The insurance company keeps telling me they can't get the shop to return calls or send over the documentation they need to process the repair. The shop owner keeps telling me the insurance company is dragging their feet and lowballing the estimate. Meanwhile I'm sitting here in a rental watching the weeks pile up.

I've tried to stay out of it — like, why am I the messenger here? — but both sides keep pulling me in.

Then tonight I got a message from the shop owner saying that if I don't pay him a large chunk of money directly, in cash, he's going to hold my car until I do. Didn't mention insurance at all. Just me, cash, or he keeps the car.

I haven't replied. I told my insurance contact about it right away. But honestly I'm spiraling a bit because:

  • Is this even legal?
  • Does he have some kind of lien on my car now?
  • Am I on the hook for this even though I'm the victim here?

Has anyone been through something like this? I feel totally trapped and I didn't do anything wrong. Any perspective would be really appreciated.

9replies

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9 replies

  • 17
    spry-wolf-342

    A few practical things that might help right now:

    1. Put everything in writing going forward. If the shop owner texts you again, don't just screenshot — reply in writing so there's a record that you received the demand and didn't agree to it. 2. Ask your insurance contact to send you a written summary of their attempts to reach the shop. You want documentation that the holdup isn't on your end. 3. Check if your state has a consumer protection office or AG hotline that deals with auto repair disputes — some states have specific rules about shops holding vehicles.

    You didn't cause this mess and you shouldn't have to solve it alone.

  • 17
    quiet-heron-774

    Did you sign anything with the shop when you dropped the car off? Like an authorization or repair order? Sometimes those have language in them about who's responsible for payment if insurance doesn't cover the full amount. Not saying you owe him anything, but it might be worth reading the fine print before assuming you have zero exposure here.

  • 16
    plain-lynx-517

    I don't trust either side in this situation honestly. The shop sounds shady, but don't let the insurance company off the hook either. They love it when the blame lands on a third party because it slows down their payout. Make sure you're documenting every single call and message from both of them — dates, times, what was said. If this ends up in any kind of dispute, that paper trail is everything.

  • 15
    wise-crow-382

    Oh man, I had almost the exact same feeling of being trapped between the shop and the insurance company after my accident. It's so frustrating because you're the one who got hurt and somehow you end up doing all the legwork. What eventually helped me was getting a PI attorney involved — not even to sue anyone, just to have someone in my corner who could make calls on my behalf. The shop's tone changed really fast when there was a lawyer on the other end of the phone.

    • 21
      clever-dove-372

      I used to work on the insurance side and I want to flag something: a shop demanding cash directly from you instead of billing the at-fault carrier is a major red flag. Like, that is not standard practice at all. A legitimate shop knows how third-party claims work. The 'mechanic's lien' thing is real — shops can sometimes hold a vehicle for unpaid work — but the key word is unpaid work. If insurance hasn't paid because the shop won't communicate with them, that's a very different situation than insurance refusing to pay. Don't hand over a dime before you talk to someone who knows your state's lien laws.

    • 9
      quiet-wolf-761

      This is so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that you've been without your car for months and now THIS is just awful. Please don't let them bully you into handing over cash. Trust your gut — something about that shop doesn't sound right.

  • 12
    wise-marten-751

    Do not pay him cash. Full stop. That request alone tells you everything you need to know about this shop. Get your car out of there as soon as you legally can, even if it means towing it somewhere else mid-repair. A bad shop holding your car 'hostage' only gets worse the longer it drags on.

    • 3
      gentle-parent502

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 11
    clever-badger-230

    Not legal advice, but mechanic's liens vary a lot by state and the circumstances matter enormously. The fact that the shop may have created the payment delay by not cooperating with the insurer could affect whether a lien is even valid here. I'd strongly suggest at least a free consultation with a personal injury or consumer protection attorney before you respond to that cash demand or do anything else. Don't ignore it, but don't pay it either — not yet.