Inside the Shop Series — April 2025
Post 2 of 4  ·  Expert Tips for Sacramento Drivers

OEM vs. Aftermarket Parts:
The Truth Every Sacramento
Driver Needs to Know

Your insurance company may push for aftermarket parts to save money — but what does that mean for your vehicle's safety, warranty, and long-term value? We break down the real differences so Sacramento drivers can make an informed choice and stand up for their rights.

By the Rippers Team April 2025 9 min read

Picture this: you've just been in a collision — not your fault — and you're sitting across from an insurance adjuster. They hand you a repair estimate and somewhere in the fine print you see the phrase "like kind and quality parts" or "LKQ." You nod because it sounds reasonable. But what it actually means is that your vehicle — the one engineered to protect you in a crash — may be rebuilt with parts that were never tested to your manufacturer's specifications. At Rippers Body Shop in West Sacramento, we've seen this scenario play out for Sacramento County drivers for over 61 years. This post exists so it never catches you off guard again.

What OEM and Aftermarket Actually Mean

OEM stands for Original Equipment Manufacturer. OEM parts are made by the same manufacturer — or a certified supplier — that produced the components originally installed on your vehicle at the factory. When a Toyota OEM bumper bracket goes on your Camry, it is dimensionally, metallurgically, and mechanically identical to what came off the assembly line. Same tolerances. Same materials. Same fit.

Aftermarket parts are produced by third-party manufacturers with no direct relationship to your vehicle's maker. Some are excellent. Many are adequate for non-structural cosmetic applications. But in collision repair — where parts interact with crumple zones, airbag sensors, and structural load paths — the difference in fit tolerance and material specification can be significant, and in some cases, dangerous.

Here's a side-by-side comparison of what that difference looks like in practice:

FactorOEM PartsAftermarket Parts
SourceFactory or certified OEM supplierThird-party manufacturer
Fit toleranceEngineered to factory specVariable — may require adjustment
Crash testingTested as part of vehicle systemNot always crash-tested for your vehicle
WarrantyTypically covered by manufacturerSeparate warranty, if any
Cost to insurerHigherLower — insurer's preference
Resale value impactNeutral to positiveMay reduce value if disclosed
CAPA certified optionN/ASome — look for CAPA or NSF mark

The Safety Case for OEM Parts

This is not about brand loyalty. It is about physics, engineering tolerances, and what happens to your vehicle in a second collision after an improperly repaired first one. Modern vehicles are engineered as integrated safety systems — every panel, bracket, and sensor interacts with every other component during a crash event. When one part doesn't fit exactly right, that system breaks down.

01
Crumple Zone Integrity

Crumple zones are engineered to absorb and redirect crash energy in precise ways. Aftermarket panels with different metal grades or thicknesses can alter how that energy transfers — potentially directing more force toward the passenger cabin.

02
Airbag Sensor Calibration

Airbag deployment depends on sensors calibrated to the structural behavior of your specific vehicle. An aftermarket bumper or bracket that doesn't deform at the same rate as the OEM part can cause airbags to deploy late, early, or not at all.

03
Structural Fit Tolerance

OEM parts are manufactured to tolerances measured in fractions of a millimeter. An aftermarket part that fits "close enough" may create stress points at mounting locations, leading to premature fatigue cracking — invisible until it fails.

04
Crash Test Certification

Your vehicle earned its NHTSA and IIHS safety ratings with OEM components installed. Aftermarket parts are not part of that certification. Replacing structural components with non-OEM parts technically takes your vehicle outside its tested safety parameters.

At Rippers Body Shop, our technicians are trained to identify where OEM parts are structurally non-negotiable versus where quality aftermarket options — particularly CAPA-certified or NSF-certified parts — are a legitimate choice. That distinction matters, and we're always transparent about it with every West Sacramento, Davis, and Woodland driver who comes through our doors.

What Your Insurance Company Isn't Telling You

Insurance carriers have a financial incentive to specify aftermarket parts in repair estimates. Aftermarket parts cost less. That's the entire reason. What they don't always volunteer is that California law gives you specific protections when it comes to parts used in your collision repair.

California Insurance Code Section 758.5 requires that insurers disclose when non-OEM parts are specified in a repair estimate. It also requires that those parts be identified by name and manufacturer, and that the insurer warrant that those parts are at least equal to OEM parts in fit, quality, and performance. If an aftermarket part causes a problem after your repair, your insurer — not just the parts manufacturer — has legal exposure.

Here's what "like kind and quality" (LKQ) language in your claim actually means in practice: the insurer is telling you they'll pay for parts that are comparable to what was on your vehicle. Comparable is not the same as identical. Comparable is not the same as certified. And comparable is absolutely not the same as crash-tested to your vehicle's specifications.

You have the right to request OEM parts. Many Sacramento drivers don't exercise that right simply because they don't know it exists. Now you do.

Warranty Implications You Need to Know

If your vehicle is still under the manufacturer's warranty — or an extended warranty — using aftermarket parts in a structural repair can create complications when you make a future warranty claim. While the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act prevents manufacturers from voiding your entire warranty simply because aftermarket parts were used, it does allow them to deny coverage for issues caused by those aftermarket parts.

In practice this means: if an aftermarket suspension bracket fails and causes damage to adjacent components, your manufacturer can reasonably deny warranty coverage for those adjacent components on the grounds that the root cause was a non-OEM part. Proving otherwise puts the burden on you.

What Sacramento drivers should document: Request a written parts list from your body shop specifying OEM or aftermarket for every part used in your repair. Keep this with your vehicle records. If a warranty claim arises later, that documentation protects you from being caught in a dispute between your insurer's aftermarket choice and your manufacturer's warranty terms.

When Aftermarket Is Actually Fine

We're going to say something you might not expect from a body shop: aftermarket parts are sometimes the right call. Rippers has been giving Sacramento drivers honest advice for over 61 years, and that means telling you when OEM isn't the only reasonable option.

Non-Structural Cosmetic Parts

Grilles, trim pieces, mirror covers, and similar non-structural cosmetic parts from reputable aftermarket suppliers are often perfectly acceptable — especially when CAPA or NSF certified.

Older Vehicles Outside Warranty

On a 10-year-old vehicle no longer under any manufacturer warranty, the warranty protection argument for OEM weakens considerably. Quality aftermarket may be a cost-effective and reasonable choice.

Budget-Constrained Situations

If you're paying out of pocket and the repair involves non-structural components, CAPA-certified aftermarket parts let us do the repair right without the OEM price premium.

Parts Availability

For some older or discontinued models, OEM parts are simply no longer available. Quality certified aftermarket is the only option, and in those cases it's the right one.

The key distinction is always structural versus non-structural, and whether CAPA or NSF certification is present. At Rippers, we'll always tell you which category a part falls into and give you our honest recommendation — not the one that costs us less time.

How to Advocate for Yourself at the Body Shop and With Your Insurer

Knowledge is leverage. Here's exactly what to do at every stage of the repair process to protect your rights, your vehicle, and your wallet.

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Your Rights Checklist: OEM Parts & Insurance Claims
  1. Read your estimate line by line. Every part should be listed with its source. If it says "LKQ," "aftermarket," or "A/M" — that's a non-OEM part. Ask about every single one.
  2. Invoke California Insurance Code 758.5. Tell your adjuster in writing that you are invoking your rights under this code and requesting OEM parts for all structural components. Use those exact words.
  3. Request the parts list in writing before repairs begin. Ask your body shop to provide a written list of every part — OEM or aftermarket — that will be used in your repair. A reputable shop will provide this without hesitation.
  4. Check for CAPA or NSF certification on any aftermarket parts you accept. These are the two main quality certification bodies for aftermarket collision parts. Uncertified aftermarket is a risk not worth taking on structural components.
  5. Document everything before you sign. Photograph your vehicle on drop-off. Keep every estimate, supplement, and invoice. This paperwork is your protection if a warranty dispute arises later.
  6. Know you can choose your own body shop. In California, your insurer cannot legally require you to use a specific shop. Choose a shop you trust — one that will advocate for OEM parts on your behalf.
  7. Follow up in writing after your repair. Ask your body shop for a written record of every part installed — OEM or aftermarket — with part numbers. Keep this with your vehicle title and service records permanently.
Rippers Tip — Request OEM in Writing, Before Anything Else

The single most effective thing you can do when your claim is opened is send your insurance adjuster a short email — before any estimate is finalized — that says: "I am requesting that all structural and safety-related components be replaced with OEM parts per California Insurance Code Section 758.5. Please confirm this in writing." That email creates a paper trail that significantly strengthens your position if the insurer pushes back. Most of the time, they won't. At Rippers, we send this language to insurers on our customers' behalf as a standard part of how we handle every West Sacramento and Sacramento County claim.

Questions We Hear Every Week

Do I have to accept aftermarket parts from my insurance company?

No. Under California Insurance Code Section 758.5, you have the right to request OEM parts for your repair. Your insurer may argue about cost, but they cannot legally force you to accept non-OEM parts on structural components without your consent. Request OEM parts in writing and reference the code by name — this alone changes most conversations with adjusters.

Are aftermarket parts as safe as OEM parts?

It depends entirely on the part and its application. CAPA-certified or NSF-certified aftermarket parts meet established quality standards and are generally acceptable for non-structural cosmetic applications. However, for structural components — panels that form part of your vehicle's crumple zone, airbag sensor mounting points, frame reinforcements — OEM parts are the only choice that guarantees your vehicle performs to its crash-tested safety specifications.

Can aftermarket parts void my car warranty?

The Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act prevents manufacturers from voiding your entire warranty because aftermarket parts were used. However, manufacturers can deny warranty coverage for specific damage they can demonstrate was caused by an aftermarket part. If your vehicle is under warranty, insisting on OEM parts in your collision repair eliminates this risk entirely and keeps your warranty protections clean.

What does LKQ mean in auto insurance?

LKQ stands for "like kind and quality" — insurance industry language for parts that are comparable to (but not necessarily identical to) the original components on your vehicle. LKQ parts can include aftermarket parts, recycled OEM parts from salvage vehicles, or remanufactured parts. When you see LKQ in your estimate, ask your adjuster to specify exactly what type of part is being proposed for each line item.

Does California law protect me from aftermarket parts in collision repair?

Yes. California Insurance Code Section 758.5 requires insurers to disclose when non-OEM parts are used in a repair estimate, identify those parts by name and manufacturer, and warrant that they are equal to OEM parts in fit, quality, and performance. If an aftermarket part fails or causes additional damage, your insurer shares legal responsibility. Knowing and invoking this code by name puts you in a significantly stronger position during any insurance negotiation.

The Bottom Line

Your vehicle was engineered as a safety system. Every part in that system was designed, tested, and certified together. When a collision happens, the quality of the repair — and the parts used in it — determines whether that safety system performs the way it was designed to in the next one. That's not a sales pitch. It's physics.

At Rippers Body Shop in West Sacramento, we advocate for OEM parts on every structural repair — not because it's more profitable for us, but because it's the right outcome for you. We've been doing this for Sacramento County drivers, Davis residents, and Woodland families for over 61 years. The conversation about parts quality is one we're always willing to have, and always willing to have on your behalf with your insurer.

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The Rippers Body Shop Team
West Sacramento's Trusted Collision Repair Experts Since 1964  ·  (916) 372-5353