Rock chip repair cost
The rock-chip repair is one of the highest-value services in the auto-glass business. A chip the size of a dime gets fixed in about 30 minutes for under $150 — and that's usually fully covered by your insurance. Here's what to expect on pricing and why acting fast is the difference between a $100 repair and a $400 replacement.
Typical pricing
In the Kansas City metro:
- Single chip repair: $80–$150
- Each additional chip on the same windshield: +$25
- Short crack repair (under 6"): $110–$180
- Mobile service surcharge: +$25–$45
Most shops include a 1-year warranty: if the repair fails and you need a replacement within a year, the repair fee credits toward the new windshield.
Why repair is much less expensive than replacement
A repair takes one tech, no glass inventory, no calibration, and 30 minutes. A replacement takes one or two techs, $200+ of glass, often $200+ of calibration equipment time, and 2-3 hours including cure time. The materials cost for a repair is essentially a syringe of UV-cured resin and the labor is brief.
Insurance companies do the math too — that's why most comprehensive policies cover chip repair at $0 deductible. A $100 repair claim today prevents a $500 replacement claim six months from now after the chip spreads.
What insurance pays
If you have comprehensive auto coverage:
- $0 glass-coverage rider: repair is fully covered, you pay nothing.
- Standard deductible $100+: usually the repair is still covered at $0 because most insurers explicitly waive the deductible for chip repair (they want to avoid a future replacement claim).
Filing a no-fault glass claim in Kansas or Missouri does not typically raise your rate. See does insurance cover windshield replacement.
Why act fast
Glass expands and contracts with temperature. A chip that's stable at 70°F can spread overnight when temperatures swing 30 degrees and you crank the defroster on the way to work. KC weather, especially in spring and fall, is a chip's worst enemy.
Other things that can rapidly worsen a chip:
- Hot water on a cold windshield (sudden thermal shock)
- Slamming a door (pressure wave through the cabin)
- Driving over potholes or speed bumps (flex in the body)
- Pressure washing the windshield directly
If you have a chip today, get it scheduled this week. Don't put it off.
What the repair actually does (and doesn't)
The repair process injects UV-cured resin into the void the rock left in the outer glass layer, then cures it under UV light. It restores about 95% of the original structural strength and stops the damage from spreading.
What it won't do: make the chip completely invisible. There will be a faint discoloration roughly the size of the original chip. The repair is a structural fix, not a cosmetic one. For damage in the driver's primary line of sight, that residual scar can be distracting — most shops recommend replacement instead for driver-side chips.
Get a chip-repair quote — usually $0 with insurance
VIN-driven, takes about a minute, no obligation.
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