Your Car’s Tiny Bump Now Costs £3,699 To Fix. Here’s Why

Car crash vehicles ready to be scrapped
Car crash vehicles ready to be scrapped (image courtesy Deposit Photos)
Car crash vehicles ready to be scrapped
Car crash vehicles ready to be scrapped (image courtesy Deposit Photos)

A car park bump used to cost a few hundred pounds to sort. A scuffed bumper, a cracked light cluster, maybe a respray. You would wince, pay the excess, get it fixed and move on. That era is over.

Data published by the Association of British Insurers on 30 April 2026 shows that the average accidental damage claim in the UK has risen to £3,699. That is up 8% in a single quarter. In the first three months of this year alone, insurers paid out £1.9 billion in vehicle repair bills, up 3% on the previous quarter and part of a total claims payout of £2.9 billion.

The cars themselves have not become less reliable or more prone to damage. What has changed is what sits behind the bodywork. The average new car sold in the UK today is packed with sensors, cameras, radar modules and computing hardware that did not exist a decade ago. When that bodywork gets dented, cracked or replaced, all of it has to be recalibrated. And that is where the bill explodes.

Why A Simple Repair Is No Longer Simple

A modern car’s bumper is not just a painted plastic panel. On a typical 2024 or 2025 model, the front bumper houses parking sensors, a forward-facing radar unit for adaptive cruise control and emergency braking, and often a camera for the surround-view parking system. The rear bumper houses another set of parking sensors, a reversing camera, and on some models, rear cross-traffic alert radar.

When any of these panels are damaged, the repair is no longer just bodywork. Every sensor behind that panel needs to be checked, and in most cases replaced or recalibrated to factory specification. The radar unit alone can cost several hundred pounds. Add the sensors, the camera, the new bumper panel, paint matching, fitting and recalibration labour, and a rear bumper replacement on a modern SUV or executive saloon can easily reach £1,500 to £2,000.

Ten years ago, the same repair on an equivalent car without those systems might have cost £400 to £600. The physical damage is identical. The bill is three to four times higher because of what is hidden behind the plastic.

The Windscreen Problem

The windscreen is perhaps the clearest example of how repair costs have escalated. A basic windscreen replacement used to cost £150 to £250. For a modern car equipped with Advanced Driver Assistance Systems, the windscreen sits directly in front of a forward-facing camera that powers lane-keeping assist, autonomous emergency braking, traffic sign recognition and adaptive cruise control.

When that windscreen is replaced, the camera must be recalibrated to factory tolerances. Even a millimetre of misalignment can cause the safety systems to misread the road. The recalibration alone adds £150 to £400 to the bill depending on the vehicle, and the replacement glass itself is often more expensive because it must meet the optical specifications required by the camera system.

For a typical family car with ADAS, a windscreen replacement now costs £400 to £600. For premium vehicles with more complex systems, the total bill can exceed £1,000. The glass might look the same. The technology behind it has made it three to five times more expensive to replace.

Most vehicles manufactured from 2014 onwards have at least one camera mounted behind the windscreen. By 2026, the vast majority of new cars sold in the UK come with multiple ADAS features as standard, meaning this is no longer a premium-car problem. It affects everyone buying a relatively new vehicle.

What This Means For Your Insurance Premium

The ABI data shows that despite repair costs climbing, the average motor insurance premium has held steady at £560, barely moving from the previous quarter and actually £20 lower than the same period last year. That sounds like good news, but it comes with a warning.

Insurers cannot absorb rising repair costs indefinitely without passing them on. The 8% quarterly increase in the average claim is significant. If that trend continues, premiums will eventually follow. The industry is currently offsetting some of the cost through lower claim frequency, partly driven by the same ADAS technology that makes repairs expensive. Automatic emergency braking prevents collisions. Lane-keeping assist reduces side-swipes. The cameras and sensors that cost so much to fix are also reducing the number of times they need fixing.

That balance is holding for now. But every year, more cars on the road have these systems, more of those systems are damaged in minor incidents, and the cumulative repair bill grows. The £1.9 billion paid in Q1 2026 is a number that will only increase as the fleet modernises.

For individual drivers, the practical effect is already visible. A minor claim that would once have barely dented your no-claims discount now pushes your renewal premium up by hundreds of pounds, because the insurer paid £3,699 to fix what looked like a minor scrape.

The Write-Off Threshold Is Getting Lower

One consequence of rising repair costs that catches many drivers off guard is the write-off threshold. Insurers will write off a car when the repair cost exceeds a certain percentage of its value. That threshold varies by insurer but is typically between 50% and 70% of the car’s market value.

On a five-year-old car worth £8,000, a repair bill of £3,699 represents 46% of the car’s value. Add a hire car, storage fees and assessment costs, and the insurer is likely to declare it a total loss rather than fix it. A car with a dented bumper and a cracked sensor module that looks perfectly repairable to the owner ends up written off because the economics no longer stack up.

This is already happening at scale. Cars that look cosmetically damaged but mechanically sound are being scrapped because the sensor technology behind the damaged panels costs more to replace than the car is worth. For owners of older vehicles that are still perfectly functional, this is a growing risk with every passing year.

How To Protect Yourself

None of this can be avoided entirely, but there are steps that reduce the risk.

A dashcam provides evidence in the event of a collision that is not your fault, protecting your no-claims discount and ensuring the other party’s insurer covers the repair. Given the cost of even minor claims, a dashcam costing £50 to £100 is one of the most effective investments a driver can make.

Parking carefully matters more than it used to. A trolley ding in a supermarket car park is no longer a cosmetic nuisance. If it catches a sensor or cracks a camera housing, it becomes a four-figure claim. Choosing end spaces, parking further from other vehicles, and avoiding tight multi-storey car parks where possible all reduce exposure.

Increasing your voluntary excess will lower your premium, but consider what that means in the context of a £3,699 average claim. If your excess is £500 and you need to claim, you are still facing a significant shortfall on a car that might be written off as a result.

The most uncomfortable truth in all of this is that the technology making cars safer is also making them vastly more expensive to fix when things go wrong. The industry built these systems into every new car without building affordable repair pathways alongside them. Drivers are now paying the price, whether through higher claims, higher premiums, or cars written off for damage that would once have been fixed in an afternoon.


Sources:

Jarrod

Jarrod Partridge is the founder of Motoring Chronicle and an FIA accredited journalist with over 30 years of experience following motorsport and the global automotive industry. A member of the AIPS International Sports Press Association, Jarrod has covered Formula 1 races and automotive events at venues around the world, bringing first-hand insight to every race report, car review, and industry analysis he writes. His work spans the full breadth of motoring — from the latest EV launches and road car reviews to the cutting edge of motorsport competition.

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