Electric vehicles are becoming an increasingly common sight on Los Angeles roads. But when an EV is involved in a collision, the repair process introduces a set of considerations that differ slightly from gas-powered vehicles. If you drive an EV, understanding these differences can help you make informed decisions when it matters most.
The Battery Pack
The most significant difference between repairing an EV and a gas-powered vehicle comes down to one component: the high-voltage battery pack. In most EVs, this pack is large, heavy, and integrated into the vehicle’s floor structure, which means that even a moderate collision can affect it directly or indirectly. Unlike a gas tank, a damaged EV battery pack isn’t just a fuel problem; it’s a serious safety concern. A compromised battery can overheat, short circuit, or in extreme cases, cause thermal runaway: a condition where the battery generates heat faster than it can be released.
For this reason, every EV that comes in after a collision requires a thorough battery pack inspection before any other repair work begins.
Specialized Training and Equipment
Working safely around an EV’s high-voltage systems requires specific training that goes well beyond conventional auto body knowledge. Technicians must be certified to handle, isolate, and inspect high-voltage components safely. At Eli’s Collision Repair, our team is trained to work on today’s most advanced EVs, with the equipment and protocols necessary to handle these vehicles safely and correctly.
Gas-powered vehicles carry their own hazards, of course, but EVs introduce electrical risks that require a different approach in the shop. Proper de-energizing of the high-voltage system is a mandatory first step before any significant repair work begins.
Structural Differences Matter
Many EVs are built with unique structural designs to accommodate their battery systems and optimize crash performance. Aluminum is used extensively in EV construction to offset the weight of the battery pack, and aluminum repair requires different techniques, tools, and dedicated workspaces compared to traditional steel. Cross-contamination between aluminum and steel during repair can accelerate corrosion, making it critical that certified shops like Eli’s maintain separate repair areas for each material.
Sensor and Software Recalibration
Like all modern vehicles, EVs are packed with cameras, radar, and driver-assistance sensors that must be recalibrated after a collision, but EVs often layer additional complexity on top of that. Regenerative braking systems, battery management software, and other EV-specific systems may all require diagnostic attention following a repair.
Repairing an EV correctly requires specialized knowledge, proper certification, and a commitment to doing the job right from the first inspection to the final diagnostic check. At Eli’s Collision Repair, we bring nearly 50 years of expertise to every vehicle that comes through our doors, including the growing number of EVs on Los Angeles streets.
Have an EV that needs collision repair? Get an estimate today.