Vehicle Complexity Driving Increases in Repair Time Cycle
Repair cycle time and length of rental have seen steady increases over the last several years. Within the industry the primary explanation used to explain these increases is growth in vehicle and repair complexity; which preliminary comparison of vehicle repair cost to cycle time would seem to bear out. For example, in Crash Course 2018, vehicle in to vehicle out average days increases as repair costs rise – repair time increases nearly two full days with every $1000 increase in repair cost (see Figure 1).
A comparison of DRP repairs from Q2-2017 to Q1-2018 at an individual state level however reveals the states with the highest average repair costs don’t necessarily have the longest repair times. Figure 4 shows the individual state’s average DRP repaired vehicle cost indexed to the national average DRP repaired vehicle cost of $3,160, and the individual state’s average days from repair start to repair complete. For example, Wyoming’s repair cost index is among the highest at 128, yet its average repair time was only 7.8 days versus Colorado’s repair cost index of 116 and average repair days of 10.7 days. Labor costs differences among the states likely drive some of the difference in repair costs, but other factors beyond that certainly drive the differences in repair times.
Lastly, repair volumes for collision and liability insurance vehicle losses have historically fluctuated less among states than comprehensive loss volume, which can spike from a large hail storm like those experienced in Denver in May 2017 and Texas in the spring of 2016. For example, a comparison of comprehensive loss share of overall repair volume by state suggests shop capacity may also be driving repair times – many of the states with larger share of comprehensive losses during the period analyzed have longer repair times (see Figure 6); but not in every case. Each of these comparisons illustrate the importance of understanding regional differences and how that might impact national results, particularly for operators and insurers with a broad multi-state footprint.
So with growing vehicle and repair complexity are helping pressure repairer productivity and driving up repair cycle time, what can repairers and insurers do to manage this trend? Repair times may continue to grow, but there is potential opportunity to focus on and improve overall claim cycle time. Appraisal review tools can help streamline the communication and estimate review process between repairers and insurers. Data from Q1 2018 comparing claim cycle times among DRP customers that use an electronic review versus those that don’t suggest tools such as these can help reduce the back-and-forth that lead to higher supplement frequency and higher claim cycle times (see Figure 12).
By Susanna Gotsch, director & industry analyst for CCC Information Services Inc.