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