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My Wife Hit a Metal Can on the Highway in Our 2025 Model 3, Now Tesla Says We Need an Entire Battery Replacement

My wife hit an unavoidable metal can in our 2025 Tesla Model 3 Long Range. What should have been minor road debris damage has turned into a major headache. Tesla Service Center just informed me the impact punctured the battery pack's protective casing.

There was a time, not so long ago, when hitting debris on the highway was a minor inconvenience, a bent rim, a cracked oil pan, maybe a chunk of aluminum embedded in your undertray. You’d pull over, curse the Department of Transportation, throw a wrench or two, and be back on the road after a weekend in the garage with a six-pack and some elbow grease. 

When Road Debris Leads to Expensive EV Repairs

But in the electric era, when a 4,000-pound techno-pod glides silently over pavement with a lithium heart beating beneath, the stakes are wildly different. What once cost a couple hundred bucks and a few swear words now threatens to write a five-figure check and throw a wrench into the entire green-car utopia we’ve been sold.

"My wife passed over metal can in highway with her new Tesla 3 2025 , Tesla told me that i need to change the whole battery , i am disappointed that battery is not protected with any metal. Insurance told me they will cover repairs in Tesla certified garages only not Tesla itself ,

Facebook Group Screenshot Tesla Model 3

Any thoughts about certified garages , i am in Montreal ?

** These photos in Tesla service center after they towed there , they told they will send me the estimate tomorrow to replace the whole battery , There is Battery Coolant Leak as well.

Tesla Model 3 Damage Pictures

That’s the reality of owning an electric vehicle in 2025, a reality wrapped in laminated spec sheets and sold with the aroma of progress. One metal can on a Quebec highway, and suddenly, you're looking at a full battery replacement, not a patch job. 

$15K+ Costs and the New Reality for EV Owners

Not because the car exploded in a lithium-fueled inferno, but because the underbody battery pack, the core of the vehicle, was compromised. There’s a coolant leak and a dented casing, and now a tech at a Tesla-certified shop is running the numbers on what’s likely a $15,000-plus ordeal. Welcome to the age of plug-in fragility.

Back in the days of crankshafts and cam lobes, this would've been a two-hundred-dollar problem. Maybe you cracked the oil pan, maybe you dripped some oil onto the driveway, maybe you cursed your luck. But the fix was surgical, targeted, and rooted in decades of mechanical logic. 

Tesla Model 3 PerformanceFrom $200 Fixes to $15K Replacements

Not anymore. Now, a stray soda can trigger a cascade of diagnostics and a full battery swap, as though the only acceptable solution is total organ replacement. It’s the kind of overreaction you’d expect from a bureaucratic health insurance plan, not a modern car company. More troubling still is the environmental contradiction. 

Essential EV Battery Insights: Longevity, Warranty, and Replacement Costs

  • Electric vehicle (EV) batteries are designed to last between 15 and 20 years under optimal conditions, depending on the manufacturer. ​
  • Most automakers offer warranties covering EV batteries for 8 years or 100,000 miles, ensuring coverage against significant degradation or defects during this period. ​
  • Over time, EV batteries may experience reduced capacity, leading to decreased driving range. Signs of degradation include diminished range and longer charging times.​ Replacing an EV battery can be costly, ranging from $5,000 to $20,000, depending on the vehicle model and battery size. ​

The electric car was pitched as a beacon of sustainability. But where’s the sustainability in replacing an entire battery pack over minor underbody damage? That’s 1,000 pounds of lithium, nickel, copper, and rare earth materials heading for either an industrial refurbish plant, or worse, a landfill. It’s a wasteful response to what should be a routine repair. The absence of proper underbody shielding, no steel plate, no sacrificial panel, nothing, feels like negligence disguised as engineering efficiency. A few millimeters of aluminum could’ve prevented this mess entirely.

How Bureaucracy Drives Up EV Repair Expenses

Of course, it doesn’t end there. The insurance labyrinth adds insult to injury. Tesla won’t perform the work unless the insurer signs off, and the insurer won’t cover Tesla’s own shops, only third-party “certified” garages that often lack full access to proprietary repair tools and diagnostics. The result is a bureaucratic standoff while the car sits lifeless in a garage bay somewhere in Montreal. The owner is left pacing between adjusters and service advisors, fighting not just a coolant leak but the opaque policies of an automaker that seems allergic to its own customers.

The Growing Pains of the Electrified Auto Industry

This isn’t a Tesla-only issue, it’s systemic. It’s the growing pains of an industry sprinting toward electrification without considering the mechanical realities of daily life. EVs are marketed like smartphones, but roads are not sanitized Apple Store floors. They’re littered with cans, rocks, potholes, and the occasional rogue muffler. Until manufacturers harden their designs and rethink the “replace, don’t repair” philosophy, these small incidents will continue to balloon into headline-worthy disasters. It’s not that EVs are inherently flawed, it’s that they’ve been built for the showroom, not the street.

The Paradox of EV Sustainability and Fragility

And therein lies the central contradiction of the modern EV: A promise of progress wrapped in fragility. Tesla and its peers need to learn something ICE cars figured out decades ago, real-world durability matters. People don’t drive in controlled environments. They drive through snow, gravel, city filth, and yes, even over metal cans. And when a $200 oil pan fix becomes a $17,000 battery replacement, it’s not just a repair issue, it’s a design failure. Until that changes, every soda can on the highway is a reminder that the road to sustainability is still full of potholes.

Noah Washington is an automotive journalist based in Atlanta, Georgia. He enjoys covering the latest news in the automotive industry and conducting reviews on the latest cars. He has been in the automotive industry since 15 years old and has been featured in prominent automotive news sites. You can reach him on X and LinkedIn for tips and to follow his automotive coverage. 

 

Comments

Steve (not verified)    March 17, 2025 - 9:24AM

You are forgetting the bomb underneath gas powered cars that just as easily could've exploded when driving over debris in the road. Poorly researched topic so the article is useless as you wrote it.

EV Fire Statistics:
Data from the National Transportation Safety Board shows that EVs were involved in approximately 25 fires for every 100,000 sold, compared to 1,530 for gasoline-powered vehicles.

V Hoppe (not verified)    March 17, 2025 - 9:37AM

This writer us sparking unnecessary fear, uncertainty and doubt! Super biased. His repair numbers keep increasing throughout his article, like a ever increasing size of a fish story. Late in the article he then says it isn’t just a Tesla problem but is within the entire EV industry. So why just bash Tesla? Oh right, it is because of Elon… boring. Let’s just stop. The bottom of the car isn’t fabric, it is real world durable. And she didn’t run over a tin can, maybe a truck axel part. That damage is from steel. If this would have happened to an ICE car, u wouldn’t be driving to the service center. You would be getting towed. This could have damaged the engine on any car. This entire article is all about possibilities. One car got tore up from road debris. That doesn’t make Tesla and the entire EV industry unsafe and any more expensive to maintain than any other vehicles. Stuff happens when driving on any road. Just stop.

vinay Patel (not verified)    March 17, 2025 - 10:22AM

I will claim from State Road Agency For Damaging The Vehicle on Freeway. If U R in California U Have to Claim from CALTRANS.

Jim (not verified)    March 17, 2025 - 8:10PM

Welcome to the modern automotive age. This all actually began decades ago when auto makers started with built in failabilty parts. Ever wonder why parts fail just after the warranty ends? But running over a "metal can" would never cause that much damage to running gear on an ICE vehicle. It would be almost impossible to do more than dent a metal oil pan. But newer vehicles still have enough plastic underneath to cause serious issues with road debris. But again, that's modern automotive age.

EVs are junk in my book. I'll never own one. At least not until I can do all the repair work myself, which will never happen. Add in lack of infrastructure to charge, real life proof of just how much BS we were fed about EVs and costs and it's an easy NOPE.

We need to look into microsizing diesel electric motors into passenger vehicles. Take those giant diesel electric motors in heavy earth moving equipment and put it in cars and trucks.

Harold (not verified)    March 18, 2025 - 11:20AM

What's with this bias, the last few days at least there's been just non stop bashing of teslas. If anyone drove over an object and it punctured the gas tank wouldn't they need a new gas tank too? This is the safest way to change out a battery pack. The alternative would be to peel it open test each battery unsoldered and resolder new batteries. The man hours would be just as much as a new one. Geez

Chris Grey (not verified)    March 18, 2025 - 12:12PM

Really a crankshaft was $200? Maybe in 1965 but buddy a crank or cam repair is easily a grand. And maybe if you were lucky enough to have a repair space you could get the part for $400 and then spend a week and a half rebuilding your engine. $200 bucks and weekend my ass. Granted it's still cheaper than a battery replacement on a Cybertruck but don't exaggerate how much of a pain in the wallet ICE cars are.

Bobby Murphy (not verified)    March 18, 2025 - 8:18PM

Why are you blaming all EVs? This is a Tesla problem, both in piss poor design and in service. Are there examples of other manufacturers making such embarrassingly fragile vehicles?

Serge (not verified)    March 19, 2025 - 10:26AM

Utter nonsense. I own a body shop and since early 2023 we've been specializing in Tesla repair. We fixed well over 100 Teslas since then with various collision and mechanical damages, including broken axles, control arms, steering knuckles, tie rods, bent subframes, destroyed drive units etc. Out of hundred Teslas fixed, I believe only two had a serious HV battery damage requiring battery replacement. The pictures in the article show a broken plastic cover in front of the battery called an aero shield, the battery itself is encased in a thick metal cage and the only reason I believe it requires replacement is a broken plastic niple that goes inside the battery casing where a coolant hose connects too. Easily fixable in many cases but since it's an insurance job - the entire battery will be replaced as any slightly damage part is replaced due to insurance regulations. EVs just like an ICE car have their pros and cons, it's very easy to destroy the engine of an ICE car by crushing an oil pan. In fact, Teslas sustain minimal damage after front end collision, that usually very easy to fix by replacing a few panels and bolted on parts. Tesla would not suffer an irreparable damage when the cooling system is compromised and all the coolant leaks out, it would even be drivable in most cases. Educate yourself about various automotive technologies first so you can write actual articles and not tabloid pieces...

Gen (not verified)    March 20, 2025 - 7:21AM

Expensive to own as beta testers for an incomplete product that is the opposite of robust. Unless that's the point and planned obsolescence is part of the hidden cost to Tesla ownership.

Mike (not verified)    March 20, 2025 - 7:32AM

I've been a tech for over 40 years. The damage in the pictures in not from a soda can. Also you can't replace an oil pan for $200.