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kind-dove-654

Tow company hit me with a massive bill I never agreed to — any recourse?

Still kind of in shock writing this out. I was in a bad wreck on a state highway a few weeks ago — not my fault, other driver ran a red — and because of where it happened the police dispatch called a tow company off some kind of official rotation. I never got to pick anyone, never saw a rate sheet, never signed anything agreeing to a price.

When my car got to their lot I finally found out what they were charging. The number was way beyond anything I could have imagined for towing a standard sedan. We're talking multiple thousands of dollars just for the tow and the first few days of storage. Now they're piling on daily storage fees and hinting they'll lien the car if I don't pay fast.

I called the county office that manages the rotation list and they basically told me there's no rate agreement or price cap with any of the companies on it. So these guys can charge whatever they want to people who literally have zero choice in the moment.

I looked this company up and the reviews going back years are full of people saying the exact same thing happened to them. It feels really predatory — like they know people are vulnerable after a crash and just go for it.

I've talked to one attorney who told me it'd be hard to find someone to take it on contingency because the dollar amount isn't big enough. But the storage fees keep growing every single day so that could change.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Is there a consumer protection angle here? Do I just pay it to stop the bleeding and fight later, or does paying kill any claim I might have?

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9 replies

  • 8
    spry-heron-875

    Most states have some version of a consumer protection statute that covers unfair or deceptive trade practices — the kind of thing that could apply when a business charges wildly inflated prices to customers who had no real choice. The pattern of reviews you mentioned could actually be meaningful there, because it can help show a practice rather than a one-time mistake. I'd look into whether your state has a specific towing regulation statute too — some states cap what rotation tow companies can charge for exactly this reason. Filing a complaint with your state AG's consumer protection office costs nothing and sometimes prompts the company to settle fast just to make the complaint go away.

    • 6
      wise-elk-948

      A few questions that might matter here: Did you get anything in writing from the county confirming no rate agreement exists, or was that just a verbal conversation? And when you say the reviews show the same pattern — are those reviews specifically mentioning the rotation/captive customer situation, or just general complaints about high prices? The specifics could matter a lot if you end up filing anything formal.

  • 11
    genuine-fox-787

    This makes me so angry on your behalf. You just survived something scary and instead of being able to focus on recovering you're dealing with this. I'm sorry. I hope you find a path through it.

  • 2
    clear-crow-661

    Oh man, this happened to me almost exactly. Rotation tow after a highway accident, no price discussion, then a bill that made my jaw drop. I ended up negotiating directly with the lot manager — not the front desk, the actual owner — and got it reduced significantly just by being persistent and calm. Didn't even need a lawyer. Worth trying before you do anything else.

    • 16
      hearty-elk-906

      Former adjuster here. A few things worth knowing from the inside: first, your auto insurance may have a towing and storage benefit that covers some of this even if the amount feels small compared to the bill — check your declarations page. Second, adjusters deal with predatory tow companies constantly and some carriers have negotiation leverage you don't have as an individual. Loop your insurer in and specifically ask if they'll negotiate the storage fees on your behalf. They sometimes do it just to close the claim cleanly. Don't assume you're alone in fighting this number.

    • 12
      curious-sparrow-741

      Not legal advice, but the 'no one will take it on contingency' answer from one attorney doesn't mean you've exhausted your options — it might just mean the damages as they stand today aren't large enough for that attorney's model. If the storage fees keep compounding, that math changes. Also, consumer protection claims in some states allow for fee-shifting, meaning a winning plaintiff can recover attorney fees separately from damages. That changes the calculus for attorneys significantly. Might be worth a second opinion specifically from someone who handles consumer protection or deceptive trade practice cases.

    • 6
      curious-stoat-827

      Stop the storage fee clock immediately — that's your most urgent problem. Find out if your state allows you to formally dispute or request a hearing on the tow charges, because in many places doing so freezes or limits the storage fees while the dispute is pending. Google '[your state] towing dispute process' tonight. Every day you wait that meter is running.

  • 6
    bright-hare-358

    Whatever you do, don't let your insurance company pressure you into just paying it quietly so they can close your file fast. That bill deserves to be challenged. Adjusters are incentivized to wrap things up, not necessarily to get you the best outcome.

  • 7
    genuine-beaver-464

    I just want to say — you mentioned it was a bad wreck. Please make sure you're not letting the stress of this billing nightmare push you to skip or delay any follow-up medical care you might need. Financial stuff can be fought over time. Your body recovering properly can't wait. Hope you're doing okay physically.