Insurer Authorised Labour Rates

Andrew Hill • 15 April 2026

What Bodyshops Need To Know.

Repairer Polishing Car Bonnet
One of the questions we are asked most often by independent repairers is simple.

“What should we be charging per hour?”

It sounds like a straightforward question, but the honest answer is that there is no single number that works for every repairer or every job.

Labour rates in the accident repair industry vary for many reasons. They can change depending on the insurer involved, the type of vehicle being repaired, the level of damage, the time of year, and even the working relationship between the repairer and the insurer.

Because of that, giving a single hourly rate that every repairer should charge would not be accurate or helpful.

What we can do, however, is share the data we see from real authorised repairs.

Where The Data Comes From

The figures shown in the Insurer Authorised Labour Rates table are based on authorised labour rates from the last four months up to the end of February.

To make sure the information reflects real activity, the data only includes insurers where at least 10 repairs were authorised during that period.

These are not estimates or assumptions. The rates come from actual authorised repairs.

It is important to remember that this still represents only a section of the market. It reflects the work we see through our own estimating activity rather than every repair happening across the UK.

So the table should be seen as a snapshot of current activity rather than the complete picture of the entire industry.

What The Data Shows

The first thing that most people notice when looking at the table is the difference between insurers.

Across the insurers included, there is nearly a 20 pounds per hour gap between the highest authorised labour rate and the lowest.

That is quite a spread when you consider the work being carried out.

In many cases the repairs involve the same technicians, the same equipment and the same manufacturer 
repair methods, yet the authorised hourly rate can vary significantly depending on which insurer is involved.

This does not necessarily mean one insurer is right and another is wrong. It simply reflects the fact that different insurers operate with different pricing structures, networks and commercial models.

For repairers, though, it highlights an important point.

Not all work returns the same value.

Why There Is No Single Labour Rate

Many repairers understandably want a clear answer when it comes to labour rates.

In reality, labour rates in insurance repair are influenced by several factors.

The Insurer

Different insurers operate with different commercial models and expectations when it comes to labour rates. 

Some insurers run large approved repair networks with agreed commercial terms, while others work with a wider range of independent repairers.

Because of this, authorised labour rates can vary from one insurer to another.

The Type Of Vehicle

Modern vehicles often require specialist repair procedures, advanced driver assistance systems, and additional calibration work.

These factors can influence the overall complexity of repairs and the discussions around labour rates.

Seasonal Workloads

Workload across the industry can change throughout the year. Winter months often bring higher accident volumes, while other periods may be quieter.

These changes in demand can influence how repairs are managed and authorised.

Repairer Capability

Not every workshop operates at the same level of investment, training and equipment. Some workshops have manufacturer approvals and specialist repair capabilities.

Those differences can also play a role in the labour rates being authorised.

Why Authorised Labour Rates Matter

Understanding authorised labour rates can be useful for repairers for a number of reasons.

Firstly, it provides a real world view of what is actually being approved in the market.

Secondly, it allows repairers to see where their own labour rate sits compared to the rates being authorised across the work we see.

This does not mean repairers should automatically match those rates. Every workshop has its own costs, overheads and business model.

However, having visibility of authorised rates can help repairers make more informed decisions.

Even a small difference in labour rate can make a noticeable difference over time.

For example, a difference of just five pounds per hour across a large number of repairs can quickly add up across a year.

Why We Share This Information

At Estimate Solutions we work closely with independent repairers across the UK.

One of the things we hear regularly is that repairers often feel they are operating without clear information about how labour rates are moving across the market.

By sharing data like this we aim to bring a little more clarity to the conversation.

Our role is not to tell repairers what they should charge.

Every workshop has its own costs, staff, equipment and operating model.

Instead, the aim is simply to share real information from authorised repairs so repairers can better understand what is happening in the market.

Why This Table Is Only Part Of The Picture

Although the data can be useful, it should not be treated as a fixed guide.

The table reflects a specific set of data from a specific period of time.

Rates can change. Insurers may adjust their pricing structures, vehicle technology continues to evolve, and wider market conditions can shift.

Because of this, the figures shown should be viewed as current observations rather than permanent benchmarks.

If You Want To Know More

If you are unsure where a specific insurer currently sits on average, feel free to get in touch.

We are often asked about individual insurers and what authorised labour rates are currently being seen in the data.

While we cannot set labour rates for repairers, we can often share insight into what is being authorised across the repairs we see.

Having that information can help repairers better understand the market they are working in.

A Question For The Industry

Finally, we would be interested to hear from repairers themselves.

Looking at the table of authorised labour rates, does it reflect your own experience with the insurers you deal with most?

Or are you seeing something different in your own workshop?

Open conversations like this help the industry better understand the challenges and opportunities ahead.

by Andrew Hill 15 February 2026
Learn how to prepare an accurate insurance repair estimate for your bodyshop. Reduce rejections, protect profit margins, and improve approval times with this step-by-step UK guide.
by Andrew Hill 27 January 2026
Fault and non-fault repair processes explained for bodyshops. Learn how claims handling support reduces admin, protects cashflow, and speeds up repairs.
by Andrew Hill 16 December 2025
Waiting months for payment from insurers can put pressure on any business. Cash flow delays cause stress, hold back investment and make day to day operations more difficult than they need to be. That is where Estimate Solutions comes in. Through our invoice factoring support, we provide a faster, clearer route to payment with no added admin. With over 20 years of experience in the automotive estimating sector, Estimate Solutions understands the pressure repairers face. Our services are designed to reduce hassle, improve profitability and support fair outcomes. Invoice factoring is a key part of that commitment. What Is Invoice Factoring and Why Does It Matter? Invoice factoring allows repairers to receive early payment for a completed job by selling the invoice to a third party, known as a factoring company. This unlocks the cash tied up in that invoice — often in less than 48 hours — without having to wait 90 to 120 days for the insurer to pay. At Estimate Solutions, we go further. We prepare, audit and manage the full submission process for your invoice. We do not charge you for this service. The only fee is the small amount charged by the factoring company itself. It is a cost that often pays for itself by saving time, avoiding errors and eliminating delays. What We Do for You • We audit the job: We double-check what the engineer has written and what may have been missed at your end. • We prepare the invoice: Every detail is captured and properly formatted. • We verify cover details: Including VAT status and excess to prevent incorrect deductions. • We submit it for you: One point of contact. No chasing. No calls to the insurer. • We push for fast payment: You can receive funds in under 48 hours. Why Repairers Are Using This More Than Ever With rising costs and longer insurer payment cycles, invoice factoring has become essential for many independent businesses. The cost of waiting is often higher than the factoring fee. Our clients are turning to us for reliability, accuracy and the peace of mind that their income is protected. No Charge for Our Support Let us be clear. Estimate Solutions does not charge for the administration or support of this service. Our job is to make life easier. The fee is paid to the factoring company and is transparent from day one. Free Supplementary Estimates Fair usage policies apply, but our supplementary estimating service is included at no extra cost. If something changes on the job or you have a dispute, we will help you claim what you are due. The Online Portal – Your Admin Lifeline You can access everything through our online portal. Submit jobs. Track estimates. Upload invoices. It is built to make your life easier and reduce time spent chasing payments. Final Thoughts Invoice factoring is not just about getting money faster. It is about running your business on your terms. With Estimate Solutions, you have someone in your corner who understands the industry and respects your time.
by Andrew Hill 18 November 2025
A vehicle damage estimate sets the tone for everything that follows: cost, method, safety, cycle time and the relationships between repairer, insurer and customer. When it’s accurate, compliant and well‑evidenced, approvals flow and margins hold. When it’s vague or optimistic, queries multiply and profits slip. At Estimate Solutions, we help teams produce estimates that deliver clarity, compliance and confidence, consistently and at speed. Partnering with Repairers, Protecting Profits. The independent repairer’s trusted estimating partner — delivering clarity, compliance, and confidence with every job. The Estimate’s Job (and Why It Matters) An estimate is a structured statement of work: damage identified, methods selected, labour and parts required, materials, calibrations and cost. It is not a placeholder to be “tidied up later”. In a UK market where insurers require compliance and repairers must protect margin, a strong estimate is the common truth everyone can align around. The Essentials of a Good Estimate 1) Capture Damage with Discipline Work methodically inside and out. Record impact points and deformation paths, especially around structures, looms and ADAS sensors. Separate accident damage from pre‑existing defects (stone chips, corrosion, prior poor repair). Take clear, timestamped images: overviews, impact close‑ups, panel edges and gaps. In systems such as Audatex, enter only what you can justify, every line should map to evidence, method or measurement. 2) Let Method Drive the Money Anchor tasks in recognised procedures (manufacturer data or Thatcham). Note bonding, rivet patterns, torque values, heat control and corrosion protection. Modern vehicles combine HSS, aluminium, composites and bonded structures—if the procedure mandates replacement, the estimate should reflect that. Include ADAS resets and calibrations with clarity on who performs them and when. When method drives labour and parts, approvals come faster. 3) Labour That Stands Up Use credible times and split labour correctly (panel, paint, M&E, structural). Consider legitimate complexities: trim remove/refit, access, non‑standard fixings, EV/HEV isolation and ADAS implications. Avoid habitual add‑ons, if you always add the same block of time regardless of model, expect pushback. A good estimate reads like a planned job card, not a wish list. 4) Parts: Correct, Complete, Considered Verify numbers and supersessions, and justify new vs repair vs reclaimed where appropriate. Handle clips, fixings and minor components transparently to avoid rekeys. Think ahead about paint‑blend impact when selecting adjacent panel strategy; explain why. 5) Paint and Materials: Explain the “Why” Use recognised paint calc models. Call out colour complexity (tri‑coat, special finishes), blends and any extra process steps. Include materials realistically, primer, clear, thinners, tapes, masking, protective films and corrosion protection. When the paint story is obvious in the estimate, non‑technical reviewers need fewer queries. 6) Compliance Built‑In Compliance is protection—for you and the customer. Show traceability from damage to method to cost. Include safety‑critical operations (EV/HEV isolation, torque checks, ADAS calibration). Align with insurer protocols and your quality system (e.g., BS 10125 processes, where applicable). Make VAT and any excess/contribution treatment explicit. If it reads audit‑ready, it’s approval‑ready. 7) Evidence Pack: Enough, Not Excess You don’t need 300 photos, you need the right set. Before repair: vehicle ID, overviews, impact, edges/gaps, sensor areas. Method references: key screenshots or citations where they materially affect cost or safety. For supplements/sign‑off: show the hidden damage or calibration results. When narrative and images match, engineers say “yes”. Speed Without Sloppiness Turnaround matters, but rushing creates rework. Industrialise quality instead: - Templates that prompt common operations (EV safety, ADAS, corrosion protection). - Checklists to catch low‑value, high‑friction items (clips, trims, code clears). - Standard photo sets so every job starts with adequate evidence. At Estimate Solutions we aim for a rapid turnaround while maintaining standards, we typically provide an 8‑hour turnaround on estimates, because a fast, accurate “yes” beats a hurried “maybe”. The Hidden Cost of Weak Estimates Weak estimates create avoidable cost and delay: 1. Approval drag from poorly justified lines. 2. Rekeys due to wrong parts or unrealistic times. 3. Supplements when calibrations or protection steps were missed originally. 4. Margin leakage from under‑claimed labour or materials. 5. Reputation risk when customers sense dithering or inconsistency. Avoiding this isn’t about padding; it’s about building it right first time. A Lean Pre‑Submission Checklist Vehicle & Damage [ ] Reg/mileage/VIN; claim refs [ ] Clear photo set (overviews, impact, edges/gaps, sensors) [ ] Pre‑existing damage noted Method & Safety [ ] OEM/Thatcham procedure referenced [ ] EV/HEV isolation considered [ ] ADAS implications + calibration plan [ ] Corrosion protection/bonding/rivets/torque values allowed for Labour, Parts, Paint [ ] Credible times split by category [ ] Parts verified incl. clips/fixings [ ] Paint calc + blends justified Compliance & Clarity [ ] VAT/excess/contributions explicit [ ] Notes explain any deviations [ ] Evidence aligns with narrative If you can tick these with confidence, you’re close to “approved”. Communicating With Insurers (and Their Engineers) Meet engineers in the language of evidence and safety: - Lead with method: “OEM procedure X requires replacement of Y due to HSS construction.” - Show safety thinking: “Battery isolation and post‑repair health checks included due to hybrid architecture.” - Quantify finishing: “Colour is tri‑coat; blending into adjacent panels is required for an OEM‑equivalent finish.” - Provide proof: “Photos 7–12 show loom damage; loom section and routing time included per spec.” Clarity shortens the distance to “yes”. Supplements: Handle With Care Hidden damage happens. Keep trust by: - Flagging early with concise notes and images. - Updating method references where the approach must change. - Keeping supplements proportional and clear, don’t bury small items in large, unrelated adjustments. - Maintaining the same standard as the original estimate. EVs and ADAS: The New Normal Modern vehicles are sensor‑rich and software‑dependent. Three implications: 1. Pre‑repair planning: safe isolation, protection of sensitive components and materials. 2. Integrated process: calibrations and code clears are integral, not optional extras. 3. Documentation discipline: record calibrations and retain results. Good estimates treat these as routine requirements, not edge cases. Protecting Profit (Without Raising Eyebrows) Profit protection isn’t adding fluff, it’s claiming legitimate work: - Charge for skill actually used. Careful dismantling, protection and re‑assembly to method is skilled labour. - Don’t donate materials. Masking, clips, fixings, corrosion protection and consumables add up. - Fight rework, not customers. Under‑claiming time triggers rushed jobs and comebacks that cost far more than any queried minutes. Insurers respond well to accuracy and honesty. So do customers. Build a System, Not a Hero Culture The best estimating teams rely on process, not heroics: - Refresh method knowledge regularly. - Maintain template libraries for common damage types and EV/ADAS scenarios. - Peer‑review complex jobs a second pair of eyes prevents misses. - “Show your working.” If a line can’t be justified, it shouldn’t be there. This is how you achieve speed and quality at the same time. Final Thought: When to Call in Estimate Solutions If you don’t have the time to build every estimate this way, aren’t fully confident with repair methods and ADAS/EV requirements, or you feel you’re not getting the value you should from a repair, bring us in. Bring Us In If You’re Experiencing • Time pressure: bays are full, approvals are slow, and estimating slips to the end of the day. • Insurer pushback: repeated queries on labour, blends, calibrations or methods. • EV/ADAS uncertainty: you want every safety‑critical step included and evidenced. • Margin leakage: legitimate clips, corrosion protection and code clears keep getting missed. • Staff gaps: holidays, sickness or recruitment mean you need cover. • No Audatex access: you still need compliant, insurer‑ready estimates fast. What We’ll Deliver • Professional Audatex estimates that are method‑correct, evidence‑led and audit‑ready. • Insurer‑ready notes explaining the ‘why’ behind key lines. • ADAS/EV lines and documentation handled properly from the start. • Predictable speed: a rapid 8‑hour turnaround on estimates. • Profit protection: no padding just capturing legitimate labour, materials and consumables. • Supplement support: clear, timely updates when hidden damage appears. • A smooth process via our Online Portal designed to make life easy. Ready to Make Estimating Easy? Use our Online Porta l designed to make life easy to submit your next job in minutes. Prefer to talk first? Get in touch via the website and one of our experienced VDAs will respond promptly. Partnering with Repairers, Protecting Profits. The independent repairer’s trusted estimating partner — delivering clarity, compliance, and confidence with every job.
Insurance steering tactics are damaging the independent repairer sector.
by Andrew Hill 4 November 2025
Insurance steering tactics are damaging the independent repairer sector. Estimate Solutions calls for honest dialogue, transparency, and fair competition to protect policyholder's legal rights and skilled independent repairers.
by Andrew Hill 7 October 2025
Let’s talk about something that’s slowly starting to create friction with a lot of repairers. But yet, it is seen as “standard practice.” Collection / Satisfaction Notes. They’ve been around for Donkeys Years. A customer signed to confirm they were happy with the repair. Simple. Fair. Sensible. But now, that same note has become something else entirely. It’s being used by some insurers as a reason to delay or withhold payment. And that’s a problem worth talking about. What These Notes Were Meant to Do Originally, the process was straightforward. The piece of paper was about customer satisfaction, a quick check and signature to confirm the repair was complete and the work was up to standard. But as the industry’s evolved, that original purpose has been lost. We now have digital job systems, photo documentation, delivery records, and timestamped communication. Everything an insurer could possibly need to confirm a job’s been completed already exists. And yet, repairers are still being told: “Payment can’t be processed until the Collection / Satisfaction Note is received.” So what started as a safeguard for quality has quietly turned into a tool for delay. What They’ve Become In many cases, these notes don’t even mention satisfaction anymore. They simply confirm the car’s been collected or delivered. So, let’s be honest, if the repair’s done, the customer’s got the car back, and the insurer already has full job records what are these notes really achieving? Because right now, they’re not protecting customers. They’re protecting cash flow, just not for the repairer. Each missing form becomes another administrative reason to hold back payment, and every delay puts more financial pressure on businesses that have already done the work. It’s an outdated process with real-world consequences. The Real Impact For repairers, this isn’t about paperwork — it’s about getting paid for completed work. Every unnecessary delay has a huge impact on the businesses and people actually delivering the service. Jobs are finished. Cars are collected. Invoices are sent. But payment still sits in limbo because a single outdated form hasn’t been ticked off. In an industry already facing tight margins, that’s not just inconvenient — it’s unsustainable. Where We Go From Here The industry has moved on. We’ve got better systems, stronger documentation, and more transparency than ever before. What we don’t need are processes that exist purely because they always have. If the intention behind these notes was customer satisfaction, there are better ways to confirm that. If it’s proof of delivery, there are cleaner digital solutions already in place. At this point, Collection / Satisfaction Notes don’t add value — they add delay. The Bigger Picture This isn’t about pointing fingers. It’s about recognising that old paperwork can’t keep pace with modern processes in place within the industry. When insurers hold up payments for admin that adds no real value, it doesn’t protect the process, it damages it. And ultimately, it puts unnecessary strain on repairers who’ve already upheld their side of the agreement. It’s time to start asking: What actually helps the customer? What supports the repairer? And what just slows everything down? Because if a note designed to confirm satisfaction now creates frustration, then maybe the system needs to evolve, not the paperwork.
estimator chcecklist
by Andrew Hill 29 September 2025
Independent repairers, we’ve got your back. Get fast, accurate estimates through our Online Portal built to save you time and protect your profits