Not all insurers cover glass. Farm Bureau is one of them. No coverage available at any cost.Just call your insurance company. They replace windshields all the time with no increase to your premium. It will cost you an hour or two of your time, but you learned a good lesson by never lending your car out again.
There really is no reason to make the borrower pay for the repairs when you can get it done for free without penalty.
A friend of mine borrowed my truck. When he brought it back, my windshield was broken. He says that it was broken from a rock coming off the road, but I don't believe him. It looks to me like it was punched from the inside. How can I tell the difference?
Either way, rocks don't jump up by themselves, if someone else's vehicle kicked up one or it was an object that flew off a vehicle (dump truck etc) then your friend should have followed them, taken license plate, filed police report, and gotten their insurance involved.
Just call your insurance company. They replace windshields all the time with no increase to your premium. It will cost you an hour or two of your time, but you learned a good lesson by never lending your car out again.
There really is no reason to make the borrower pay for the repairs when you can get it done for free without penalty.
If it broke your windshield?LOL, if I did that, I'd never get to work.
You don't have zero-deductible glass coverage? 😵Not sure where you're getting that info but it is wrong. I would have to make a claim and pay a deductible to have my windshield replaced.
You don't have zero-deductible glass coverage? 😵
You don't have zero-deductible glass coverage? 😵
Anyway - modern auto safety glass is two layers of glass sandwiching plastic that reinforces it and keeps it from shattering. If he picked up a rock, the crack will be in the outer layer, if he damaged it from the inside (I have done this while trying to remove stickers on the inside of a window using a heat gun... in the winter. Not my finest moment.), the crack will be on the inside layer.
Easy to check by running a fingertip over the crack and feeling for the edge/lip/grab when you pass over it.
This varies by state. Farm Bureau doesn't have a separate glass policy like many other insurers do, but they put that coverage under their comprehensive policy. Most deductions for comprehensive are $250-500.....non OEM replacement windshields can be had for $125-150 + $125-150 for installation...so you typically will be in for $250-300 to get it repaired.Not all insurers cover glass. Farm Bureau is one of them. No coverage available at any cost.
Yikes. Mine is a third that and I can demand OEM glass, which I do.Glass coverage is ~ $100 a year. I can get a windshield replaced for under $200. I'll take my risk.
If it broke your windshield?
You don't have zero-deductible glass coverage? 😵