Auto Body Shops in Washington

The largest auto body shop directory in Washington. Compare 3,000+ shops and find verified repair centers across Washington. Find the best auto body shops in Washington for paint, panel, and post-accident repairs. Compare collision repair centers across Washington and call shops directly for quotes.

Browse dent repair, bumper repair, and auto paint shops in Washington across 76 cities with 3,399 listings, including Long Beach, Lynnwood, Colton, Burbank, and Carson.

From minor dent repair (PDR) to full panel replacement and insurance claim support, this directory connects you with trusted professionals across Washington. With year-round sun and wildfire-related damage risks, many shops also support ADAS recalibration and modern repair needs.

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About Auto Body Shops in Washington

Washington has 3,399 auto body shops, collision repair centers, and dismantlers listed across 76 cities in this directory. The highest concentration is in Long Beach with 1,710 listings, followed by Lynnwood (430) and Colton (307). Together these three cities account for roughly 72% of the state’s listed shops, but you will also find smaller independent operations in towns across Washington — many of them family-run shops that handle the same collision, paint, and frame work as the larger chains.

The directory mixes full-service collision repair centers with specialized paint and body shops, dent repair specialists, and auto dismantlers. Collision centers handle structural damage from accidents — frame straightening, panel replacement, airbag resets, and refinishing — while paint and body specialists focus on cosmetic work like scratch repair, full repaints, and computerized color matching. Paintless dent repair (PDR) shops are a good fit for hail damage and parking lot dings because the process preserves the factory finish and costs a fraction of traditional body work. Dismantlers and auto recyclers in Washington sell salvaged OEM parts that can save you 40–70% compared to new replacements, which matters most for older vehicles where insurance may not cover full retail pricing.

Repair timelines vary with the severity of damage and parts availability. Minor cosmetic work — small dents, scratches, bumper touch-ups — typically takes one to three days. Moderate collision repair involving a single panel replacement and repaint usually runs five to ten business days. Major structural repair with frame damage, airbag deployment, or multiple panel replacement can take two to four weeks, and longer if the shop is waiting on back-ordered OEM parts from the manufacturer. Most shops in Washingtoncoordinate directly with insurance carriers and handle the paperwork, but you are not required to use the shop your insurer recommends. You have the right to choose where your vehicle is repaired, regardless of which shops are on your insurer’s preferred network.

Every listing includes a verified phone number, so call directly to ask about current wait times, insurance networks, workmanship warranties, and whether technicians hold industry certifications such as I-CAR Gold Class or ASE. We recommend collecting written estimates from at least three shops before committing to a repair — prices for the same work can swing 20–40% between shops, and the lowest quote is not always the best value. Look for shops that use OEM parts by default, offer at least a one-year warranty on paint and labor, and are willing to show you damage photos and replacement parts before starting work. Use the city filter above to narrow your search to shops in your area, then compare services side by side.

Top Cities for Auto Body Shops in Washington

Explore the 10 highest-demand city pages in Washington with targeted service intents.

How to Choose a Body Shop in Washington

Use these trust checks when comparing body shops across Washington. They help drivers evaluate estimates, parts quality, certifications, and realistic repair timelines before booking work.

What To Ask Before Choosing A Shop

  • Ask for a written estimate with labor, parts, paint, and fee breakdowns.
  • Ask who will actually perform the work and whether any part is outsourced.
  • Ask how supplements or hidden damage are approved before costs change.
  • Ask what workmanship or parts warranty is offered after the job is done.

OEM vs Aftermarket

Body shops around Washington may quote OEM parts, aftermarket parts, or a mix depending on the repair. OEM parts usually match factory fit and finish more closely, while aftermarket parts can reduce cost. Ask every shop which part type is included in the estimate and how that choice affects warranty, fit, and final price.

Timeline Expectations

Small cosmetic work can move quickly, but structural repairs, paint curing, parts delays, and insurance supplements often extend the timeline. In Washington, it is smart to ask for both the estimated completion date and the biggest risks that could delay delivery so you are not relying on a best-case promise.

Certification Guidance

For body shops in Washington, strong trust signals include I-CAR training, ASE credentials, and clear repair documentation. Certifications do not guarantee quality on their own, but they usually show that technicians follow updated repair standards, especially when a job involves paint matching, structural work, or modern vehicle systems.

FAQs

Are there top-rated collision repair shops across Washington?

Yes. Larger markets in Washington, especially Long Beach, Lynnwood, Colton, Burbank, Carson, usually have the widest mix of certified collision centers, paint specialists, and insurance-friendly shops. When narrowing down options, look for written lifetime warranty details and repeat experience handling moss and moisture damage and other common local damage.

Why do repair prices vary between cities in Washington?

Prices vary across Washington because labor rates, rent, parts supply, and local demand are different from one city to another. Shops in larger markets like Long Beach, Lynnwood, Colton, Burbank, Carson may price differently than smaller towns. Structural repairs, paint work, and sensor recalibration also increase totals regardless of location.

What weather damage is most common in Washington?

Washington's persistent rain with mild temperatures commonly leads to moss and moisture damage and rain-related road collisions. Shops statewide frequently repair paint, bumper, glass, and panel damage tied to those conditions. Quick inspection is important because weather-related damage can worsen into rust, corrosion, or hidden structural problems if repairs are delayed.