Running a Windscreen Repair & Replacement Business in Australia
The customer has comprehensive insurance. They call you. You replace the windscreen. You invoice the customer. They expect their insurer to pay. But you haven't registered with the insurer as an approved repairer. The claim process takes 6 weeks. You've done the work and you're waiting on a payment that depends on a process you're not set up for. Windscreen replacement is overwhelmingly insurance-funded. If you're not set up with the major insurers, you're outside the dominant revenue channel.
What a windscreen business looks like
What windscreen businesses deal with
Insurance billing — approved repairer status is the business
Most windscreen replacements in Australia are funded through comprehensive car insurance. Each major insurer — NRMA, AAMI, RACQ, Allianz, IAG, Suncorp — has a different portal, approval process, and billing system. Some use third-party claims managers like Nationwide Windscreens or O'Brien. If you're not registered with these insurers, you're locked out of the biggest revenue channel in the market.
Register with each insurer separately. Learn their claims submission process. Understand their approved parts requirements — some specify OEM glass, others accept equivalent quality. This registration takes time. But it's the foundational step for a windscreen business that operates at commercial scale.
ADAS recalibration — a safety issue, not an upsell
Modern vehicles increasingly have forward-facing cameras mounted behind the windscreen. These are part of ADAS — automatic emergency braking, lane departure warning, adaptive cruise control. When the windscreen is replaced, the camera position shifts enough to affect system accuracy. Recalibration resets the camera to the manufacturer's specified position.
Replacing a windscreen on an ADAS-equipped vehicle without arranging recalibration leaves an uncalibrated safety system in the client's car. That's a safety and liability issue. Either offer in-house recalibration (requires investment in calibration equipment) or set up a referral with a workshop that provides it. Note on every ADAS-vehicle invoice: "ADAS recalibration required — arranged/provided/client informed."
Mobile vs workshop — know which jobs suit which
Mobile windscreen service suits chip repairs and most standard passenger car replacements. Large commercial vehicles, rear windscreens with complex heating elements, and ADAS recalibration typically need a fixed workshop. Committing to mobile on a job that needs workshop infrastructure causes a reschedule, client friction, and reputational damage. Assess the vehicle type and job requirements at booking — not when you arrive on site.
Where windscreen businesses miss revenue and create liability
| Stage | What You Need | What's Actually Happening |
|---|---|---|
| Booking | Insurer confirmed at booking. ADAS check on vehicle. Job type confirmed (mobile vs workshop). Approval number obtained before dispatch. | Job booked without insurer setup. ADAS not checked. Mobile committed for commercial truck. Arrives on site. Can't complete job. |
| Job Completion | Glass installed to specification. ADAS recalibration arranged or completed. Photos of installed glass. Insurance documentation completed. | Glass installed. ADAS not recalibrated. Client drives off with uncalibrated safety system. Liability exposure. |
| Invoicing | Invoice submitted to insurer via approved portal. ADAS recalibration noted. Direct-pay client invoiced same day. | Invoice sent to client. Client doesn't know how to lodge insurance claim. Payment delayed 4 weeks while insurer process runs. |
| Payments | Insurer payments tracked per portal. Direct-pay clients pay by card on site or via same-day Stripe link. | Multiple unpaid insurer invoices sitting in portal. No systematic tracking. Cash position unclear. |
What windscreen businesses actually need
ServiceM8 with insurer reference numbers and ADAS check status tracked per job. Before/after glass photos attached. Invoice submitted to correct insurer portal on job close. Insurance payment tracking separate from direct-pay tracking.
Compare job management tools →Xero with separate payment tracking for insurer-funded and direct-pay jobs. Insurer payment cycles are slow — 20–45 days. Track them separately so you don't confuse outstanding insurer invoices with non-payment issues.
Compare accounting tools →Square or Stripe for direct-pay clients — chip repairs, uninsured drivers, commercial accounts. Card on site or payment link via SMS at completion. Separates quick-pay direct jobs from the slower insurer payment cycle.
Compare payment tools →Replacing windscreens without insurer registration or ADAS recalibration process?
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Frequently Asked Questions
Register with each major insurer as an approved repairer — NRMA, AAMI, RACQ, Allianz, IAG, Suncorp. Each has different portals and billing processes. Some use third-party claims managers. This registration is the foundational step for a windscreen business that operates at commercial scale — without it, you're outside the dominant revenue channel.
ADAS recalibration resets the forward-facing camera to manufacturer specifications after windscreen replacement. Required on any vehicle with ADAS camera systems. Either offer in-house recalibration or arrange it with a referral workshop. Note it on every ADAS vehicle invoice. Skipping it leaves an uncalibrated safety system in the client's car — a liability issue.
Chip repairs and standard passenger car replacements suit mobile. Commercial vehicles, complex rear windscreens, and ADAS recalibration typically require a workshop. Assess the vehicle at booking, not on arrival. Committing to mobile on a job that needs a workshop causes a reschedule and a frustrated client.