The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
Property damagepatient-wolf-089

Rear-ended, followed every rule, now the body shop says I owe them $2k out of nowhere??

I'm so frustrated I don't even know where to start. A few months back I was sitting at a red light when someone plowed into the back of my car. Not my fault, cop came out, filed a report, the whole thing.

The other driver had insurance, so I figured — okay, this is exactly what insurance is for, right? I did everything by the book. I filed through the at-fault driver's carrier, I took my car to one of their recommended repair shops, I answered every call, uploaded every document they asked for.

Here's where it gets infuriating.

While my car was in the shop — which took almost a month, by the way — I had to rent a vehicle. The insurance company told me they'd cover a rental. What they did NOT tell me is that there's apparently some daily rate cap, and if the rental goes over that, guess who eats the difference? Me. Hundreds of dollars just gone.

That alone made me feel burned. But I swallowed it and moved on.

Then last week I get a bill in the mail from the repair shop saying I owe them over two thousand dollars. Two. Thousand. Dollars. The shop says the insurance company sent part of the payment to me directly — an early estimate check I apparently cashed months ago without realizing that money was earmarked for the shop — and the rest went straight to them. Somewhere in the shuffle, there's now a gap that apparently I'm responsible for closing.

I never once understood I was supposed to be some kind of payment relay between the insurance company and a shop they told me to use.

Has anyone dealt with this? How are regular people supposed to navigate this stuff? I feel completely blindsided.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 20
    tidy-seal-081

    Oh wow, this is almost exactly what happened to me. I got a check early in my claim, didn't realize it was tied to the repair estimate, spent part of it on other bills while my car was getting fixed, and then got hit with a balance due from the shop weeks later. It was mortifying. The insurance company acts like this process is obvious but they explain none of it.

  • 20
    careful-wren-870

    Totally off the financial stuff for a sec — were you checked out after the accident? Rear-end hits can mess with your neck and back in ways that don't show up immediately. I see it all the time. Don't let the billing stress distract you from making sure you're actually okay physically.

  • 20
    kind-marten-752

    Quick question — when you got that initial check, was it made out to you only, or was the shop's name on it too? Because if it was a joint check, the shop should have signed off on it and they'd have known you received it. That detail matters a lot for figuring out whether this is actually your problem or theirs.

    • 6
      weary-dreamer517

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 18
    daring-newt-495

    I used to work in claims and I'll be honest — the way early estimate payments get issued is genuinely confusing, and a lot of adjusters don't take the time to walk people through it. What likely happened is they cut you an advance payment based on the initial damage estimate, then supplements got added later as the shop found more damage, and those went directly to the repair facility. The problem is nobody told you the first check wasn't 'yours' to spend freely. That's a process failure on their end, not a moral failure on yours. I'd push back hard in writing and ask for a full payment breakdown.

    • 3
      gentle-dreamer606

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 18
    tidy-mole-902

    A couple of things worth doing right now: first, request an itemized payment history from the insurance company in writing — every check issued, who it was payable to, and what it was for. Second, ask the body shop for the same thing from their side. Compare the two. If there's a genuine gap, you can figure out where it came from. If the gap is because the insurer shorted the shop and is now trying to make that your problem, that's a very different conversation. Document everything, don't make any payments yet.

    • 5
      hopeful-optimist162

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

  • 18
    candid-owl-154

    Don't pay that bill yet. Seriously. Get the full accounting first. A lot of times these 'you owe us' situations dissolve when you actually ask people to prove the math. And if the shop and the insurer are pointing fingers at each other, that's their problem to sort out — not yours to fund.

    • 6
      gentle-driver109

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 16
    hearty-crow-870

    Not legal advice, but situations like this — where there's a dispute about how insurance payments were applied and who's responsible for a remaining balance — are worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney. A lot of them will review something like this at no cost and can tell you quickly whether the insurer or shop has any real legal leg to stand on. You may have more leverage than you think.

  • 10
    quick-otter-995

    This is so unfair, I'm sorry you're dealing with this. You did literally everything right and you're still getting hit with unexpected bills. I really hope you can get this sorted out without having to pay anything — please keep us posted on what happens.

    • 8
      grounded-overpass978

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 8
    kind-crow-943

    This is one of those things insurance companies count on — the whole process being so confusing that you just pay whatever bill shows up because you don't know who to fight. Don't just hand over $2k without getting a complete paper trail of every payment that was made, by whom, and when. Make them show you the math.