The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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tidy-stoat-575

Repair shop gave my almost-new car back looking worse than before — do I have any options?

So my car got hit from behind at a red light a couple months ago. The other driver initially tried to claim I reversed into her, but luckily a nearby business had security camera footage that showed exactly what happened. Got an attorney involved pretty quickly after that.

Anyway, the car finally came back from the repair shop last week and I am genuinely heartbroken about how it looks. The panel along the rear quarter has this uneven waviness to it that you can see plain as day in certain lighting — almost like the metal was just pushed back into shape instead of replaced. The paint doesn't quite match either. It's subtle but once you see it you can't unsee it.

Here's my dumb mistake: I was so relieved to just have my car back that I signed the release paperwork and drove away without doing a real walk-around. I noticed the problems later that evening when I parked under a streetlight. The car only has about 22,000 miles on it — it's basically still new to me — and I paid a lot to keep it in great condition.

I'm not trying to be entitled about this. I know a repair is a repair. But "restore to pre-accident condition" feels like it should mean something, and right now it doesn't look like that's what happened.

Has anyone dealt with a bad repair job after an accident? Did you have any luck getting them to redo the work or getting some kind of compensation for diminished value? My attorney is looped in but I can't reach anyone until Monday and I'm just venting/hoping someone's been through this.

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10 replies

  • 22
    mellow-sparrow-587

    Oh man, I went through almost the exact same thing after my accident. Got the car back, thought it looked okay in the shop's fluorescent lights, then saw it outside and just felt sick. The color match was off by enough that you could tell two different panels had been painted. I went back to the shop and raised hell — calmly but firmly — and they redid the blend on the paint. Signing the paperwork doesn't necessarily mean you've waived everything, especially if the defects weren't obvious at pickup. Definitely worth going back in person with photos.

    • 22
      curious-beaver-989

      Shops that insurers steer you toward are sometimes working off a negotiated rate that cuts corners. The insurer saves money, the shop gets volume referrals, and you end up with a mediocre repair on your nearly-new car. Don't assume the insurance company is on your side here — their job is to close the claim cheaply. Get an independent estimate from a shop you choose yourself and document every single issue in writing before you go back to anyone.

    • 14
      plain-otter-016

      The fact that you have an attorney already is honestly the best position to be in. A lot of people try to navigate bad repairs totally on their own and get nowhere. Your legal team can put pressure on the right people in ways that are hard to do solo. Monday feels far away right now but you're not starting from zero here.

    • 4
      patient-passenger456

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 12
    mellow-badger-175

    Speaking from the other side of this — there's actually a process called a "re-inspection" that you can request. The insurance company sends someone out to look at the work. It doesn't always go in your favor but it's a real thing that exists. Also, the shop typically has a warranty on their repairs, so even independent of the insurance claim you may be able to get them to fix workmanship issues. Ask for that warranty in writing if you don't already have it.

    • 22
      genuine-hare-468

      Not dismissing your frustration, but I'm curious — did you use the insurance company's preferred shop or did you choose your own? And was this an OEM parts repair or aftermarket? Because some of that panel waviness can actually come from the original impact damage being worse than it looked initially, not necessarily from bad workmanship. Might be worth getting a second opinion from an independent body shop before assuming the repair was done wrong — at least so you know exactly what argument to make.

  • 9
    clever-seal-416

    Hang tight until you can talk to your legal team — this is exactly the kind of thing they need to know about. A few things that'll help when you do connect: take detailed photos now in natural daylight, write down everything you noticed and when you first noticed it, and check if the repair shop gave you any warranty documentation. Diminished value is a real claim in a lot of states, especially for a low-mileage vehicle. Your attorney can push on that separately from the liability part of the case.

    • 1
      mellow-sidewalk839

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 20
    kind-finch-061

    Go back to the shop this week, not next week. Bring photos. Be calm but be direct — tell them the repair doesn't meet the standard of restoring the vehicle to pre-loss condition and you want them to fix it. Most shops would rather redo the job than deal with a formal complaint. If they push back, that's when you escalate through your attorney or file a complaint with your state's DMV or consumer protection office, whichever handles auto repair licensing in your area.

  • 19
    silent-wren-741

    Just want to acknowledge — this kind of thing is genuinely stressful and it's okay that you're upset about it. You've already been through the trauma of the accident itself, and then dealing with attorneys and adjusters and rental cars for months, and now this. The frustration is completely valid. Take a breath, document everything carefully, and give yourself some grace about not catching it at pickup. Most people don't know what to look for in that moment.