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Does Travelers cover windshield replacement?

Short answer: yes, if you carry comprehensive coverage. Travelers treats windshield damage as a "other than collision" event covered under comprehensive. Your out-of-pocket depends on whether you opted into the glass-coverage rider and your standard deductible.

Travelers glass coverage at a glance

  • Glass rider available: Yes — usually a $1–$5/mo add-on that reduces glass deductible to $0.
  • Typical deductible: $0 (with rider) or $500
  • Claim approval speed: 2–3 business days from filing to authorization
  • Rate impact of no-fault glass claim: none — Travelers does not raise rates for no-fault glass claims

How Travelers handles shop choice

Travelers generally accepts customer-chosen shops. They may mention their preferred network once during the claims call.

You have the legal right to choose any auto-glass shop, federally protected under the federal Magnuson-Moss Act and reinforced by state-level shop-choice statutes in both Kansas and Missouri. Don't let any claims rep pressure you out of using the shop you want.

How to file a Travelers glass claim

  1. Get a quote from your chosen local shop — the estimator covers this end-to-end.
  2. Call Travelers claims at 1-800-252-4633 or file online at www.travelers.com/claims.
  3. Provide policy number, vehicle info, date and description of damage, and your chosen shop's name and contact.
  4. Travelers approves the claim (usually same day to 2–3 business days) and authorizes direct billing with the shop.
  5. Shop completes the work; you pay only the deductible (if any) at time of service.

Travelers-specific notes

  • Optional Glass Coverage rider available; not a default inclusion on all policies.
  • Filing a no-fault glass claim under comprehensive typically does not raise rates.
  • ADAS calibration coverage is explicit; calibrations are approved as part of the replacement claim.
  • Direct billing is offered through participating shops.

When it makes sense to skip the claim

If your deductible is higher than the out-of-pocket quote — for instance, a $500 deductible against a $440 standard windshield — filing doesn't help. You'd pay the same amount either way, and you'd be filing a claim that creates paperwork on both sides. For a small chip repair ($80–$150), the math also typically favors paying out of pocket unless you have the $0 glass rider.

Run the estimator to see your specific quote, then compare against your deductible.

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