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mellow-mole-077

Leased car hit by highway debris — file a claim or just pay the body shop directly?

Trying to help my aunt figure out the best move here. She was driving on the interstate last week when something — looked like a chunk of shredded retread from a semi — bounced up and caught the front quarter panel and hood of her car. There's no dent but the paint is gouged and scratched pretty badly, and there's this weird rubber streak across the hood that won't just wipe off.

The problem: she leases her car, so she has to get it fixed before turn-in or she'll get hit with wear-and-tear charges at the end. That part is non-negotiable.

She's nervous about filing with her insurance because: 1. She has no dashcam footage 2. The debris truck was long gone before she could even think about getting a plate 3. She's worried the adjuster will think she's making it up or that she sideswiped something and is covering 4. She doesn't want her premium going up over something that was 100% not her fault

I told her this sounds like it should fall under comprehensive coverage (acts of God, road debris, etc.) and that those claims usually don't ding your rate the same way a collision claim does — but honestly I'm not totally sure about that and I don't want to steer her wrong.

Has anyone dealt with a similar situation? Did going through insurance end up being worth it, or did you just pay out of pocket to avoid the headache? Body shop gave a preliminary estimate that's not cheap, so 'just pay cash' might not even be realistic here. Any insight appreciated.

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10 replies

  • 17
    wise-otter-454

    Former adjuster here. Debris damage is genuinely one of the most common comprehensive claims we saw, and the damage pattern usually tells the story — rubber transfer marks, paint gouging in a specific direction, etc. A decent adjuster will recognize it immediately. I wouldn't assume they'll think she's lying. That said, if her deductible is close to the repair cost, running it through insurance might not even make financial sense. Have her get a firm estimate first, then compare it to her deductible before deciding anything.

    • 9
      patient-hare-522

      Just be careful. Even if they don't raise her rate this time, some carriers will flag your account after any claim and find other ways to squeeze you at renewal — bundling discounts quietly dropped, that sort of thing. Get the repair estimate in writing first. If it's only a few hundred over her deductible, paying out of pocket might genuinely be the cleaner move long-term.

    • 8
      calm-neighbor823

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

  • 17
    clever-raven-172

    She should document everything right now if she hasn't already — photos of the damage from multiple angles, close-ups of that rubber transfer, and a note with the date, time, road name, and direction she was traveling. Even without dashcam footage, that paper trail matters. If the repair cost is significant and she ever wanted to pursue anything through small claims (unlikely but possible), having organized records helps. Also worth checking: some leases have gap or damage waivers built in — she should re-read her lease agreement before assuming she's fully on the hook.

    • 7
      quiet-crane-317

      Ugh, this is so stressful — none of this was her fault and now she has to run around figuring all this out. Rooting for her to get it sorted without too much hassle. Hope the body shop estimate isn't too brutal.

    • 0
      gentle-wanderer283

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 6
    calm-fox-114

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me — road debris on the highway, no way to track down who dropped it. I filed under comprehensive and my rate did NOT go up. My agent actually told me upfront that comp claims from stuff like this are considered 'not-at-fault' events in most states. Definitely worth at least calling to ask before assuming the worst.

  • 6
    warm-raven-494

    Not my usual territory but — is she okay physically? Sometimes adrenaline masks how rattled people get from sudden highway scares like that. If she felt any whiplash-type jolt when it hit or has had headaches since, that's worth paying attention to, not just the car damage.

    • 12
      swift-swift-690

      Quick question — does she know for sure it's a leased vehicle with a mandatory repair clause, or is that an assumption? Some lease agreements have more flexibility than people think, especially for minor cosmetic stuff below a certain threshold. Worth actually pulling out the lease contract and reading the wear-and-tear section before stressing over this.

  • 5
    spry-fox-623

    Get the estimate. If it's under her deductible, this conversation is already over — she's paying out of pocket no matter what. If it's meaningfully over her deductible, file the comprehensive claim. The worry about 'they won't believe her' is mostly anxiety talking — debris damage has a very recognizable look and this isn't some unusual story adjusters haven't heard a thousand times.