Wow… reading this honestly doesn’t surprise me after what I’ve gone through with State Farm as a customer. Everything you described lines up exactly with the mess I’ve been dealing with for months.
My claim started in June 2025, and the negligence has been unbelievable. My car wasn’t just left out overnight — it has been sitting for MONTHS on a public street, completely exposed, still waiting for a third-party vendor to pick it up. Every time I called, I got a different story.
State Farm even issued a supplemental payment I NEVER authorized and I never signed a single document with any body shop. No approval, no estimate, no release — nothing. Yet they still sent money out.
They later mailed me a letter with the body shop stating the payment was sent in error, which is insane because the vehicle was never repaired, never secured, and I never agreed to anything.
On November 18 at 4:15 PM, I was told my car had been picked up and moved to a “secured location.” That was completely false — it’s STILL sitting in the same spot on a public street as of today.
A rep even admitted on a recorded call that the claim was mishandled, that checks and balances weren’t followed, and that leadership would be mad because it should’ve been caught way earlier. She also said the claim would probably get kicked back.
So when I see a State Farm section manager saying leadership is pressuring staff to dig for reasons to fire people, make things up, or cover things — it explains EXACTLY why customers like me end up in situations like this.
The culture isn’t just hurting employees — it’s destroying customers’ trust and leaving us stranded.
Record everything. Document everything. I wish I had from day one.