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Insurance paying less than my body shop quoted — am I stuck covering the gap?

So I was rear-ended at a red light about three weeks ago, totally not my fault. The other driver admitted it on the spot and their insurance has accepted liability, which is great. I brought my car to a shop I've used before and trust — they gave me a written estimate that included all the stuff you'd expect: body work, paint blending on the adjacent panel, a diagnostic scan before and after, and some alignment work from the impact.

Here's where I'm confused. The at-fault driver's insurance sent their own appraiser out and came back with a number noticeably lower than my shop's estimate. Like, not a little lower — enough that I actually did a double-take. From what I've been reading online, insurers sometimes have their own "approved" labor rates and scan fees that are just... less than what shops actually charge.

My questions:

1. If the insurance only agrees to pay their lower number, does my shop have to eat the difference? Or do I have to pay it out of pocket? 2. Is it on me to go find a cheaper shop that accepts the insurer's rates, or can I stick with my shop and negotiate? 3. Are there specific line items — like those pre/post repair scans — that are worth pushing back on?

I don't want to end up with a car that's only half-fixed because the insurance lowballed the estimate. I also don't want a surprise bill I wasn't expecting. Has anyone dealt with this? What actually happened when the numbers didn't match up?

8replies

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8 replies

  • 16
    mellow-hare-761

    A couple things worth knowing: you are generally entitled to be made "whole" under the at-fault party's liability coverage, meaning your car should be restored to pre-accident condition. If the insurer's payout doesn't cover that, the difference is still the at-fault party's responsibility — not yours. The practical fight is usually between the shop and the insurer, not you and the shop. That said, it helps to get everything in writing and keep a paper trail of the original estimate vs. what the insurer approved.

  • 15
    patient-heron-966

    How far apart are the two numbers exactly? "Noticeably lower" could mean a lot of things. If it's a small gap, the shop may just write it off to keep your business. If it's a big gap, that's a different conversation. Also — did the insurer's appraiser actually physically inspect the car, or did they just work off photos? Because photo estimates are almost always incomplete.

  • 15
    calm-fox-513

    At least liability was accepted right away — that's actually the hardest part for a lot of people. Everything from here is negotiable and solvable. You're in a much better spot than folks who are still fighting over who was at fault weeks in.

  • 13
    sharp-sparrow-321

    Just want to flag — if the impact was hard enough to need alignment work, please make sure you got checked out medically too. Whiplash and soft tissue stuff doesn't always show up right away. I've seen people so focused on the car damage that they completely ignore what's going on with their neck and back until weeks later. Don't let that be you.

  • 10
    tidy-otter-952

    Went through almost this exact thing last year. The insurance adjuster came in way under what my shop quoted, and I panicked thinking I'd have to pay the rest. What actually happened: my shop called the adjuster directly, went line by line, and got most of it bumped up. The scan fees were the biggest fight but the shop won on those too. Moral of the story — let your shop go to bat for you before you stress too much.

    • 6
      bold-otter-314

      Former adjuster here. The initial number the insurer sends is almost never the final number, especially if your shop is experienced with supplements. We'd write a "tear-down estimate" knowing full well the shop would find more once they got into it. Shops submit supplements regularly and most of them get approved. The first offer is genuinely just a starting point. Don't accept it as gospel.

  • 6
    cool-stoat-516

    The insurer is counting on you NOT knowing this stuff. They're hoping you'll either go to one of their "preferred" shops (where they've pre-negotiated rates favorable to them) or just accept the lower payout and cover the gap yourself. You have the right to choose your own shop. Don't let them steer you.

    • 2
      daring-finch-780

      Tell your shop upfront that you want them to handle the supplement process and that you're not agreeing to pay any out-of-pocket gap caused by the insurer's lower rate. A good shop will tell you right away if they're willing to fight for the full amount or not. If they say you'll owe the difference no matter what, find a different shop.