The Shoulder
The Shoulder
69
gentle-tern-114

Tow truck wrecked my suspension loading it up — now they want me to drive it to them??

I'm still kind of in shock that this is even happening because I feel like tow trucks are supposed to be the solution, not a new problem.

So here's what happened: my car died on me randomly — wouldn't crank at all. Called a tow company, they came out and loaded it onto a flatbed. Seemed totally normal. Car goes to a shop, I'm waiting to hear back.

Shop calls me a couple days later and says something is seriously wrong with my front-end suspension. Like, multiple components bent or pulled out of position. The tech said it looks like something yanked on the undercarriage — not road damage, not wear-and-tear. Just... forced.

Here's the thing: that damage was not there before. I had taken the car in for an unrelated issue maybe a month ago and nothing was flagged on the suspension. The only thing that changed was the tow.

I called the tow company. Sent them photos the shop gave me. And now they're asking me to drive the car over to their lot so they can inspect it themselves. My car has a busted suspension and they want me to drive it. That feels wrong on every level — safety-wise and also just... if I drive it, doesn't that give them an excuse to say I caused more damage?

I've never dealt with anything like this. Has anyone gone through a tow company damaging their vehicle? Do I need to document everything right now? Should I refuse to move the car until someone neutral looks at it? Do I even have any leverage here?

Any advice would be really appreciated, I'm just trying to figure out my next steps.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 18
    daring-fox-541

    Oh man, this happened to me with a recovery tow after a minor fender-bender. The tow driver didn't secure the front wheels properly and dragged the car when it should've been dollied. I made the mistake of moving the vehicle before getting an independent inspection and the tow company immediately pointed to that as a way to muddy the waters. Don't drive it. Seriously. Get another tow to a shop YOU trust and have them put it in writing what they see before the tow company gets anywhere near it.

    • 14
      warm-crow-117

      Do not drive a car with damaged suspension. Full stop. That's how you blow a tire at speed or lose steering. And don't let the tow company inspect it on their own turf with no one watching — that's a setup to have them say 'looks fine to us.' Get an independent mechanic to document everything first, in writing, with photos.

  • 15
    gentle-finch-929

    The tow company asking you to bring the car to them is a classic move. They want to control the inspection environment. If they look at it themselves and say they don't see evidence of their fault, suddenly it becomes your word against theirs. Make sure you have a paper trail from the independent shop BEFORE anyone else touches that car. And check if that shop is willing to write up a formal damage assessment — that document is going to matter a lot.

    • 7
      silent-owl-466

      Worked claims for years. When a tow company damages a vehicle, it usually falls under their general liability or garage keepers policy — not your auto insurance. But here's the catch: they're going to look for any way to argue the damage was pre-existing or self-inflicted. Your best friend right now is timestamped photos, a written statement from the receiving shop, and any prior service records showing the suspension was fine before. Keep everything. Don't sign or agree to anything with the tow company yet.

    • 9
      patient-neighbor155

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 11
    bold-wolf-983

    A few practical things worth doing right now:

    1. Write down a full timeline — when you called the tow, who showed up, where it was taken, and when the shop called you about the damage. 2. Ask the shop for a written estimate and have them note in writing that the damage appears inconsistent with normal wear or road conditions. 3. If you have dashcam footage or even remember anything about how the driver loaded the car (whether it seemed rough, off-angle, etc.), note that too.

    This isn't legal advice, just stuff that tends to matter when you're building a paper trail for a damage claim.

    • 0
      careful-commuter729

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 22
    kind-elk-090

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking: tow operators have a duty of care when handling your vehicle, and if their negligence caused damage, you may have a valid claim against them or their insurer. The key issue is proving the damage happened during the tow — which is why documentation from the receiving shop right now is so critical. If you feel like they're stonewalling, a PI attorney consult is usually free and they can tell you pretty quickly if this is worth pursuing.

    • 18
      candid-marten-671

      Not trying to get off topic but — please don't drive that car until someone clears it. I've seen patients come in after suspension failures that happened at low speeds. What seems like 'just' a bent component can mean you lose control without any warning. Your safety matters more than moving fast on the claim.

    • 0
      tired-wanderer372

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 9
    calm-wolf-663

    Honestly this is so frustrating to read because you were already dealing with a broken-down car and now THIS on top of it. I'm sorry you're going through it. Just make sure you're taking care of yourself too — this kind of stuff is incredibly stressful and it's okay to feel overwhelmed.

    • 10
      curious-dreamer445

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 10
    quiet-marmot-776

    Quick question — did the shop that spotted the damage put anything in writing, or was it just a verbal call? And do you have any service records or even old photos of the car that could show the suspension was intact before the tow? I ask because 'it wasn't like that before' is hard to prove without something to back it up, and the tow company is going to push back on that.