The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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humble-crane-252

Tapped someone's bumper in a parking lot — their repair quote seems way off to me

So this happened a few days ago and I'm still kind of stressing about it. I was pulling out of a tight parking spot at the grocery store and clipped the rear corner of the car next to me. It was slow, like barely moving. I left a note with my number like a responsible adult.

The person called me and was actually really nice about it, which I appreciated. But then they texted me a quote from a body shop and honestly my jaw dropped. For what I can only describe as a small scuff on their plastic bumper cover — we're talking maybe two inches, no dent, no cracked plastic — the shop is telling them it needs a full bumper repaint and "blending" on the adjacent panel.

My car literally has zero damage. I ran my finger over my bumper and there's nothing there.

I'm not trying to weasel out of doing the right thing here. If I caused damage I'll own it. But this quote feels like it's for way more work than what actually happened. Is a full repaint really standard for a tiny scuff? Or do body shops just automatically go big on estimates?

Also — should I be going through my insurance for something like this, or is it better to try to handle it privately? I don't want my rates to go up over something so minor, but I also don't want to get taken advantage of.

Has anyone dealt with something similar? How did you handle it?

8replies

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8 replies

  • 19
    mellow-wren-184

    Not legal advice, but: before you pay anything privately, make sure you get a signed release stating the payment is full and final satisfaction of the claim. Without that, someone can accept your cash and still file a claim later. A simple written agreement protects you. Most attorneys offer free consultations if this gets complicated.

  • 18
    candid-wren-508

    Ugh, I went through almost the exact same thing last year. Minor tap in a parking garage and suddenly the other person's quote was covering stuff that looked nothing like what I caused. What I ended up doing was asking for a second opinion from another shop — just called around and got an independent estimate. The difference was pretty significant. Totally worth the extra step before you agree to anything or loop in insurance.

  • 18
    keen-dove-961

    Don't pay anything out of pocket before you really think this through. Once you hand over cash, you have zero leverage if they come back later claiming more damage. At minimum, document everything right now — take your own photos of both cars, get that second estimate, and put any communication in writing.

  • 18
    calm-lynx-002

    Did you take photos right after it happened? That's going to matter a lot here. If you've only got the other person's word and their shop's estimate, you're negotiating blind. Also — are you certain all the damage on their bumper was from you? Parking lot scuffs accumulate and sometimes people see an opportunity.

  • 13
    clear-swan-278

    Two options: report it to your insurance and let them fight over it (your rates may or may not go up depending on your policy and state), or get a second estimate yourself and negotiate privately. Personally I'd get the second estimate first before doing anything else. Takes like 20 minutes.

  • 10
    swift-wren-829

    Former adjuster here. So the blending thing is legitimately a real practice — shops blend paint onto neighboring panels because modern factory paint is almost impossible to match perfectly at a hard edge. That part of the quote isn't necessarily shady. BUT, a full bumper repaint for a two-inch scuff on plastic is on the high end, and some shops pad estimates knowing the other party is paying out of pocket and probably won't push back. Get your own estimate from an independent shop, not a dealership.

    • 14
      wise-swift-629

      A few things worth knowing: most states allow the other party to choose their repair shop, so you can't force them to use a cheaper place. What you can do is get your own independent estimate and use that as a basis for negotiation if you're settling privately. Also, if you do go through insurance, a single at-fault claim for minor property damage often doesn't raise rates as dramatically as people expect — though that varies a lot by carrier and state. Worth calling your insurer just to ask hypothetically before you decide.

  • 5
    swift-seal-093

    I know you want to do the right thing and that's honestly really decent of you. But doing the right thing doesn't mean just accepting whatever number someone throws at you. Get that second quote, stay calm, and keep all your texts with this person saved. You've got this.