Smash Repairs Richmond

Panel repair vs panel replacement: how the call gets made

The quote in your hand says “replace front guard.” You’re wondering if it could be repaired instead. Maybe to save money. Maybe because you’d rather keep the factory metal that came with the car. 

Here’s how a panel beater decides between the two. At Automotive Panel Service in Richmond, every panel repair quote starts with the same set of questions about what’s happening inside the metal. Knowing those questions yourself makes it easier to read your own quote and push back if something doesn’t add up. 

There is no universal rule. The right call depends on the panel, the damage, the vehicle, and what’s mounted behind the panel. What follows is what we’re looking at when we make that call. 

The five things a panel beater checks before making the call

Before any quote gets written, the panel is read by hand and eye. Five things drive the decision. 

  • Depth and shape of the damage. A shallow, uniform dent is usually repairable. A deep crease, a sharp fold, or damage running in more than one direction often isn’t. Metal in a sharp crease has been pushed past the point where it can return to shape cleanly. 
  • Whether the metal has stretched. When steel stretches in a crash, it can sometimes be shrunk back with controlled heat. Aluminium can’t. Aluminium “forgets” its original shape once it’s been stretched, and there is no reliable way to restore it. If your car has an aluminium bonnet, guard, or boot lid, the bar for repair is lower than it is for steel. 
  • Whether the panel has bent more than once. Metal hardens each time it’s worked. A panel that’s been straightened once and then hit again has often work-hardened past the point where it’ll hold its shape. Pushing it back creates micro-cracks you can’t see but will fail later. 
  • Whether structural parts behind the panel are involved. A guard is bolted to inner panels, chassis rails, and sub-frame components. If any of those are bent, the outer panel often comes off whether it’s repairable or not, just to get access. The outer panel question becomes secondary to the structural one. 
  • Whether it’s a safety panel. Modern bumpers, bonnets, and some guards are designed to crumple in a specific way to protect people inside the car. Repairing a panel that’s done its crumple job changes how it behaves in the next impact. Replacement preserves the engineered behaviour the manufacturer built in. 

Quick reference: repair or replace?

Those five checks usually point one of two ways. Here is how the most common scenarios land. 

What you're looking at Likely call
Shallow, single dent on a non-safety panel Repair
Surface scratch with paint still intact Repair (PDR if the shape suits)
Edge ding from a low-speed car park bump Repair
Older vehicle where factory-perfect isn't critical Repair
Multiple bends or creases in the same panel Replacement
Aluminium panel with more than a light dent Replacement
Damage near chassis rails or sub-frame Replacement
Crumple zone that has absorbed an impact Replacement
Late-model panel with ADAS sensor mounted in or behind it Replacement

The next two sections explain why each call goes the way it does. 

When is panel repair the right call?

Repair makes sense when the damage is shallow, the metal hasn’t stretched, and nothing structural is involved. In those cases, the original factory metal stays on the car, the labour cost is lower, and the finish can be invisible if the work is done well. 

Paintless dent repair (PDR) sits at the lighter end of the scale. PDR works when the paint is intact and the dent shape allows access from behind the panel. The shape of the panel is massaged back from the inside, with no filler and no respray. APS handles PDR work in the $80 to $250 per-dent range for minor multi-panel jobs, with single-dent prices varying depending on access and location. There is a full explainer on the APS PDR page if that’s what you’re weighing up. 

Repair isn’t the same as a quick fix. A clean repair takes skill, and a rushed one will show. Repair preserves what came from the factory, but only if the workshop has the time and tools to do it properly. 

When is panel replacement the right call?

Replacement is the right call when repair would compromise the panel’s strength, finish, or safety function. Each row of the replacement column above has a specific reason behind it. 

  • Multiple bends in the same panel. Metal hardens with each pass of the hammer. A panel that’s already been straightened once and hit again has often work-hardened past the point where it will hold its shape. Pushing it back creates micro-cracks that fail later. 
  • Aluminium with more than a light dent. Aluminium doesn’t shrink back when stretched. Where steel can sometimes be brought back with controlled heat, aluminium can’t. Most aluminium damage above a light dent becomes a replacement job by default. 
  • Damage near structural members. A guard is bolted to inner panels, chassis rails, and sub-frame components. If any of those are bent, the outer panel often has to come off anyway. A new panel goes back on cleaner than a repaired one in that situation. 
  • Safety panels that have absorbed an impact. Crumple zones are engineered to fail predictably in a crash. A repaired crumple panel doesn’t behave the same way next time, which compromises the safety system the manufacturer built in. 
  • Panels with ADAS sensors mounted in or behind them. Cameras, radar units, and parking sensors are calibrated to a fraction of a degree. If a sensor or its mount has moved, replacing the panel and recalibrating the sensor is often the only way to bring the safety systems back to factory tolerance. ADAS recalibration is a separate downstream cost, but it isn’t optional on a vehicle that came from the factory with those systems. 

Is panel repair cheaper than panel replacement?

The labour to repair is usually cheaper than the parts to replace. That’s the headline number, and it’s the one that makes people lean toward repair. The headline number isn’t the full job. 

Where the total cost lands depends on whether the repair needs paint to finish: 

  • Clean repair, no respray needed: repair wins on cost. 
  • Repair with a small touch-up: still cheaper than replacement. 
  • Repair plus a panel respray for colour match: often roughly even with replacement, sometimes more expensive. 
  • Repair plus a partial respray to blend adjacent panels: usually more expensive than a clean replacement with new paint. 

Replacement parts cost more, but the labour is more predictable and the outcome is more consistent. The right question to ask isn’t “what’s the cheaper line on the quote.” It’s “what’s the cheaper finished job, paint and finish included.” A good shop will walk you through both numbers. 

How do insurers view the repair vs replacement decision?

Insurers don’t make the technical call, but they have a financial interest in it. A repair is cheaper for the insurer than a replacement, and shops on insurer-preferred networks know that. 

Choice of repairer in Victoria isn’t a statutory right. The Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) on your policy is what sets the rules. Some policies give you a free choice of repairer. Others limit you to the insurer’s network unless you have a specific reason. The PDS will spell out which one applies to you. 

If your PDS allows you to choose, a second written quote from a shop outside the insurer’s network is the lever. When the second quote disagrees with the first on the repair-vs-replacement call, that’s the conversation to put back to the insurer. We’ve covered the choice-of-repairer side of this in more depth in a separate article. 

The point isn’t that insurer-preferred shops are wrong about the call. They often aren’t. The point is that a second opinion from a shop that isn’t being scored on cost-to-insurer is worth having if the recommendation surprises you. 

How do you push back on a quote you disagree with?

Ask for the specific reason. A good panel beater can walk you through what they found in the metal. Vague answers are a problem. 

“I’d like to understand why you’re recommending replacement (or repair). Can you walk me through what you found in the metal?” 

That one question shifts the conversation from “the shop has decided” to “the shop is explaining.” A workshop that can’t answer with reference to specific damage features, the stretching, the crease shape, the panel behind the panel, is a workshop to leave. 

Bring your written quote and ask the second shop to look at the same panel and give their own assessment. If both shops agree, the call is the call. If they disagree, you have real information to work with instead of one opinion. 

 

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