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steady-kestrel-481

Insurance wants to replace only half my drivetrain components — is this normal??

So I'm still kind of in shock from this whole situation and need to know if anyone else has dealt with something like this.

A few weeks ago I hit a massive pothole that the city basically left as a trap on a dark stretch of road. Blew out two tires, bent a rim, and my mechanic is telling me the front differential took a hit too. My SUV is all-wheel drive, which apparently changes everything about how repairs need to work.

Insurance adjuster comes back and says they'll only cover the two tires that showed "direct impact damage." My mechanic is shaking his head saying that's not how AWD systems work — you can't just swap half the tires without throwing off the whole drivetrain calibration and potentially wrecking the differential long-term. He's saying all four need to match within a pretty tight tread-depth tolerance or I'm looking at transmission damage down the road.

But wait, it gets better. The adjuster also hit me with a "betterment" charge because my original tires had some wear on them and the replacements are new. So I'm essentially being penalized for the fact that my tires weren't brand new before some road hazard I had zero control over destroyed them.

I did the math and between my deductible, the betterment fee, and paying out of pocket for the two tires insurance won't touch, I'm looking at a pretty significant chunk of change. For something that was NOT my fault.

Is betterment even legal to charge in every state? Can I push back on the AWD argument? My mechanic said he'd put it in writing that all four tires are mechanically necessary. Does that documentation actually help, or does the insurance company just ignore it?

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8 replies

  • 16
    spry-heron-036

    Former adjuster here. Betterment is real and legal in most states, but the way it gets applied is often more aggressive than it needs to be. Here's the thing adjusters won't tell you: betterment calculations are supposed to be proportional to actual depreciation, and a lot of companies just use a flat formula that benefits them. If your tires weren't that worn, you can absolutely dispute the percentage they're applying. Ask them to show you in writing how they calculated the betterment amount and what depreciation schedule they used. That question alone sometimes makes the number shrink.

  • 14
    daring-sparrow-193

    A few practical things worth knowing: First, check whether your state has specific regulations about betterment — some states cap it or require specific justification. Second, your mechanic's written statement about AWD drivetrain requirements is genuinely useful because it frames the additional tires as necessary to restore the vehicle to pre-loss condition, which is the standard most policies use. Third, if you hit a pothole caused by road neglect, you might actually have a separate claim against the municipality responsible for that road. That's a whole different path but worth looking into depending on where you are.

  • 12
    genuine-kestrel-699

    Not legal advice, but the "restore to pre-loss condition" language in your policy is your friend here. If your mechanic can document that replacing only two tires on an AWD vehicle does NOT restore the vehicle to its pre-loss mechanical condition — and could actually cause further damage — that's a meaningful argument under most standard auto policies. Might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your leverage before you pay anything out of pocket.

    • 10
      genuine-grouse-776

      Step one: get everything in writing. Step two: file a complaint with your state's department of insurance if they're refusing to engage with your mechanic's technical documentation. Insurers take those complaints seriously because it creates a regulatory record. Step three: don't sign anything or accept any payment until you're satisfied with the outcome — accepting a partial payment can sometimes be treated as settling the claim.

  • 12
    sharp-vole-481

    Quick question — did you file this as a collision claim or a comprehensive claim? The type of claim can actually affect how betterment is handled and what your coverage looks like for "consequential damage." Also, what does your policy actually say about restoring the vehicle to pre-loss condition? That language varies more than people realize.

  • 10
    daring-fox-770

    Oh man, I went through almost the exact same fight last year. AWD vehicle, road debris, insurance trying to nickel-and-dime the repair. What ended up helping me was getting my mechanic to write a formal repair recommendation letter specifically citing the manufacturer's AWD specifications. When I submitted that alongside the owner's manual page about tire matching requirements, the adjuster suddenly found a little more flexibility. Don't let them just brush it off verbally — make them respond to written documentation in writing.

    • 13
      curious-seal-193

      They're betting you'll just pay it and go away. That's the whole game. The adjuster's job is to close the claim for as little as possible, not to make you whole. Push back hard and document everything.

  • 6
    spry-lynx-490

    Not my area of expertise at all, but as someone who sees accident aftermath — please don't drive that car if your mechanic is genuinely saying it's not safe. I know you want to fight the insurance battle, but don't do it from behind the wheel of a vehicle that could fail on you. See if you can get a rental covered while this gets sorted out.