Got a check from at-fault driver's insurer for repairs — do I HAVE to spend it on the car?
So this whole thing has been kind of surreal and I want to make sure I'm not about to do something dumb.
About six weeks ago someone in a company van backed into my car in a parking lot while I was inside a store. Security footage caught the whole thing, the driver admitted fault immediately, and their employer's fleet insurance reached out to me super fast — almost suspiciously fast, honestly.
They asked me to get an estimate from a body shop, which I did. A few days later they just... deposited money into my account. No forms to sign, no release, nothing. I followed up and asked if they needed proof that I actually got the work done or receipts for anything, and the claims rep said something like "that's your settlement for vehicle damage, use it however you'd like."
Here's my situation: the dent is on the rear quarter panel. It bothers me cosmetically but my car still drives fine. A buddy of mine who does bodywork said he could probably bang it out for way less than what I was sent. The difference would genuinely help me cover first and last month's rent on a new place I've been trying to get into for months.
I guess my questions are:
- Can they come back later and demand proof of repairs or ask for the money back?
- Does not repairing it affect me somehow with MY insurance down the road?
- Is there any reason I should be worried about accepting this and moving on, or is this actually as simple as they made it sound?
I didn't sign anything releasing future claims. I don't know if that matters. Just want to make sure I'm not stepping into a trap here. Thanks in advance.