I'm dealing with a claim on my truck where another driver side swiped my passenger side. Her insurance, State Farm, has already accepted liability so I dropped it off at a repair shop.
The damage is the right front fender, bumper, bumper cover, both door moldings and a little part of the rear cab. On the rear door, you can see where the other car applied enough pressure to crease the panel at the rear edge between the edge of the door and the end of the door molding.
The guy, not state farm, said that State Farm will only pay to repair the immediate area which would cover about a 6x6 sq in area, and paint/blend that into the rest of the door, then clear the entire door. Is this the norm?
Last time I had to deal with an insurance claim, they covered re-spraying the entire panel though I don't recall the details of the repair. Anyhow, I have this sneaky suspicion that the insurance still pays to spray the entire panel and blend it in but the repair center might be trying to take a short cut to pocket more money. Does this seem plausible?
The damage is the right front fender, bumper, bumper cover, both door moldings and a little part of the rear cab. On the rear door, you can see where the other car applied enough pressure to crease the panel at the rear edge between the edge of the door and the end of the door molding.
The guy, not state farm, said that State Farm will only pay to repair the immediate area which would cover about a 6x6 sq in area, and paint/blend that into the rest of the door, then clear the entire door. Is this the norm?
Last time I had to deal with an insurance claim, they covered re-spraying the entire panel though I don't recall the details of the repair. Anyhow, I have this sneaky suspicion that the insurance still pays to spray the entire panel and blend it in but the repair center might be trying to take a short cut to pocket more money. Does this seem plausible?
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