Below is a compiled list of requirements for Auto Repair facilities in this state.
Below is a compiled list of requirements for Auto Repair facilities in this state.
Oklahoma Motor Vehicle Repair Law
Educational summary only – not legal advice.
1. Scope of Oklahoma Auto Repair Law
Oklahoma does not
have a single, comprehensive “Auto Repair Act.” Repair obligations arise from:
·
Limited vehicle‑specific statutes (primarily
collision/auto body repair)
·
General contract law
·
The Oklahoma Consumer Protection Act
·
Common‑law authorization and billing principles
Oklahoma is therefore a low‑prescription
state: many rules are implied rather than explicitly codified.
2. Estimates & Authorization
Written
Estimates
State
law does not require a written estimate for general mechanical repairs.
There
is no statute mandating written estimates before work begins. However,
enforceability of charges depends on disclosure and agreement under contract
law.
State
law does not specify written‑estimate requirements; general contract principles
apply.
Authorization to Perform Work
Authorization
is required as a matter of contract law, not statute.
·
Customer consent (written, verbal, or
electronic) must exist before work is performed.
·
Without authorization, charges may be
unenforceable.
State
law does not specify: – Required authorization form language – Whether
authorization must be written – Dollar thresholds triggering authorization
Over‑Estimate Approval Rules
State
law does not specify dollar or percentage over‑estimate limits.
There
is no statutory rule such as “$50 over estimate” or “10% over estimate.”
Charging materially more than agreed without approval may constitute breach of
contract or an unfair/deceptive practice.
3. Disclosure Timing
State law does not specify when
disclosures must occur.
Failure to disclose price or scope
before work begins increases exposure under the Consumer Protection Act.
4. Parts & Materials
Aftermarket
/ Non‑OEM Parts
Oklahoma
law does require disclosure of aftermarket crash parts:
·
Disclosure must be in writing
·
Parts must be itemized on the estimate
This
applies primarily to collision and body repairs.
Return of
Replaced Parts
State
law does not specify parts‑return rights.
·
No automatic right to replaced parts
·
Parts are returned only if requested in advance
and agreed upon
Where
state law is silent, shop policy governs absent deceptive conduct.
5. Records & Documentation
State law does not specify
record‑retention periods for repair shops.
There is no statutory requirement to
retain estimates, authorizations, invoices, or parts documentation.
6. Collision Repair & Storage
Fees (Effective Nov. 1, 2025)
The Oklahoma
Motor Vehicle Consumer Protection Act applies primarily to collision and
auto body shops, especially total‑loss vehicles.
Key provisions: –
Written invoices required – Caps on storage fees – Caps on administrative labor
charges – Response deadlines for vehicle release and pickup
⚠️ This law does not
create general authorization or estimate requirements for mechanical repair
shops.
7. Enforcement & Consequences
Consumer
Protection Act
Potential
violations include: – Unauthorized charges – Misrepresentation of needed
repairs – Failure to disclose pricing or parts
Possible
consequences: – Attorney General enforcement – Civil penalties – Restitution –
Injunctive relief
Contract
Law Remedies
Improper
charges may result in: – Voided or reduced bills – Refunds – Breach‑of‑contract
claims – Unjust enrichment claims
8. What This Means for Consumers
·
Always request a written estimate
·
Require approval before additional work
·
Request replaced parts in advance
·
Review collision estimates for aftermarket
disclosures
9. What This Means for Repair Shops
·
Flexibility exists, but documentation is
critical
·
Best practices strongly recommended:
o Written
estimates
o Documented
approvals
o Clear
parts disclosures
o Consistent
record retention
In Oklahoma, documentation
is your primary legal protection.
10. Bottom Line
Oklahoma auto repair law relies heavily on contract
and consumer protection principles, not rigid statutes.
If you are a consumer: get everything in
writing.
If you operate a shop: act as though written
authorization is required—because disputes are judged that way.