Insurance headache - they’ll pay to remove my PPF but not replace it after collision repair?
Ugh. Need to vent and also looking for advice from anyone who’s been through this. Got my 2023 Model Y hit in January. Driver side took the hit - both doors, fender, quarter panel, bumper, mirror, even had to replace two wheels. Not my fault at all, other driver is 100% liable. Tesla Boston is handling the repair, looking at around $16k. So here’s the annoying part. I had PPF and ceramic coating on the whole car. When GEICO wrote up their estimate, they actually included labor to remove the PPF from the hood, bumper, and fender. Great, they acknowledge it exists. But when I asked about covering the cost to reapply PPF after the paint cures? Nope. Won’t do it. …what? You’re literally paying someone to strip it off my car but you won’t pay to put it back? The car had PPF before the accident. After repairs it won’t. How is that “restoring to pre-accident condition” which is what MA law requires? Probably looking at $6K to redo everything. Anyone else run into this with their Tesla? Did your insurance cover it or did you have to fight? I’m also 0% at fault so I’m wondering if I should just go after the other driver’s insurance directly for the PPF and maybe diminished value too. Open to any suggestions because this is frustrating.