AI Assistant That Get Things Done
logo
pine
icon-back

How AI Agents Compare Repair Quotes So You Don't Have to Call 28 Shops

Calling every repair shop in town for quotes takes hours. AI agents do it in parallel and deliver a ranked comparison. Here's how it works.

Last edited on May 26, 2026
5 min read
Clay illustration of a robot making calls, repair shop storefronts, price tags, and magnifying glass

Your laptop screen is cracked, your car needs a specific repair, or your appliance is broken. You know the right move is to get multiple quotes before committing. But calling 10, 20, or 30 shops — explaining the same problem each time, writing down prices, asking about warranties, and comparing parts quality — is a massive time sink that most people skip.

AI agents are changing this by doing the calling for you. Here's how it works and what you can expect.

The Traditional Process (and Why People Skip It)

Getting repair quotes manually requires:

  1. Finding shops — searching Google Maps, Yelp, or asking for recommendations
  2. Calling each one — explaining your issue, asking for a quote, and taking notes
  3. Waiting on hold — many shops have limited phone staff
  4. Asking the right questions — not just price, but parts quality, warranty, turnaround time
  5. Comparing apples to apples — different shops may quote different scopes of work
  6. Following up — some shops need to see the device before quoting

For 10 shops, this easily takes 2-3 hours. For 20+, it's a full day of phone calls. Most people call 2-3 shops at most, or just go with the first result on Google.

How AI Agents Handle This

An AI phone agent can:

1. Identify All Relevant Shops

Search Google Maps, Yelp, and local directories for repair shops in your area that handle your specific repair type.

2. Call Them in Parallel

Instead of calling one at a time, AI agents can work through a list systematically — calling multiple shops across a span of hours or days, retrying shops that don't answer, and working through voicemails.

3. Ask Consistent Questions

Every shop gets the same questions:

  • "What's your price for [specific repair] on a [specific device/model]?"
  • "Do you use OEM or aftermarket parts?"
  • "What warranty do you offer on the repair?"
  • "How long does it take?"
  • "Do I need an appointment or can I walk in?"

4. Compile a Comparison Table

The output is a clean, ranked comparison:

Shop Price Parts Type Warranty Turnaround Notes
Shop A $199 Aftermarket 90 days Same day Walk-in OK
Shop B $250 OEM 1 year 2-3 days Appointment needed
Shop C $175 Unknown 30 days Same day Cash only

5. Handle Failed Calls

Not every shop answers. AI agents:

  • Retry shops that don't answer (at different times of day)
  • Leave voicemails with callback numbers
  • Try alternative contact methods (website forms, email)
  • Note which shops are unreachable

Real-World Results

In one documented case, an AI agent:

  • Identified 28 repair shops in London for a MacBook screen repair
  • Made 41 phone calls over several days (including retries)
  • Collected quotes ranging from approximately $200 to $700+
  • Identified the best value option at around $300 with OEM parts and warranty
  • Delivered a comprehensive comparison so the user could make an informed choice

The user would have needed to spend an entire day making those calls manually.

What Types of Repairs This Works For

AI quote comparison works for any repair where:

  • Multiple shops in your area offer the service
  • Pricing varies significantly between providers
  • You can describe the issue clearly over the phone

Common use cases:

  • Electronics: Laptop/phone screen repair, battery replacement, water damage
  • Auto: Specific repairs, body work quotes, tire pricing
  • Home: Appliance repair, HVAC quotes, plumbing estimates
  • Specialty: Watch repair, jewelry repair, musical instrument repair

Tips for Getting Better Quotes Through AI

  1. Be specific about the device/model — "MacBook Pro 14-inch M3 2024" gets better quotes than "MacBook"
  2. Describe the damage precisely — "cracked screen, display still works" vs. "screen is broken"
  3. Ask about parts quality — the cheapest quote might use the lowest quality parts
  4. Prioritize warranty — a $50 cheaper repair with no warranty is a worse deal
  5. Consider turnaround time — if you need the device back fast, a slightly more expensive same-day shop may be worth it

The Bottom Line

Getting multiple repair quotes is the smart financial move, but the time cost of calling shop after shop stops most people from doing it. AI agents eliminate this friction by making dozens of calls, asking consistent questions, and delivering a clean comparison. You make the decision; AI does the legwork. The result is typically hundreds of dollars in savings on a single repair.

Sources

  • Better Business Bureau: https://www.bbb.org/
  • FTC Consumer Guide to Repairs: https://consumer.ftc.gov/
  • Consumer Reports Repair Guides: https://www.consumerreports.org/

How many repair shops should I get quotes from?

Ideally 3 to 5 for common repairs and 5 to 10 or more for expensive repairs where pricing varies significantly. More quotes give you a better picture of the fair market price and help identify outliers, both overpriced and suspiciously cheap. AI agents make it practical to check even more shops since the time cost is eliminated.

What questions should I ask when getting a repair quote?

Ask about total price including parts and labor, whether they use OEM or aftermarket parts, what warranty they offer on the repair, estimated turnaround time, whether you need an appointment, and payment methods accepted. These six questions give you the information needed for an apples-to-apples comparison across multiple shops.

Can AI really call repair shops and get quotes?

Yes. AI phone agents can call businesses, navigate phone menus, explain the repair needed, ask for pricing and details, and record the responses. They can work through a list of 20 or more shops over hours or days, retrying those that don't answer and trying at different times. The output is a structured comparison table with prices, parts types, warranties, and turnaround times.

Faye Gong

Faye Gong

Product & Growth

I build consumer products that people love and businesses that grow — partnering tightly with engineering, design, and marketing to move fast and compound learning.

Keep Reading

Pine AI voice interaction blog cover
By Pine AI
Company news

Pine AI: The most natural human-computer interface is your voice

Keep Reading
Clay-style illustration of stethoscope, calendar with appointment slot, clock, and robot assistant with clipboard
By Faye Gong

How AI Assistants Handle Doctor's Appointments: Scheduling, Conflicts, and What They Catch

Keep Reading
Clay-style illustration of wifi router, wrench tool, calendar with pinned date, and confirmation badge
By Lisa Wei

How to Get a Confirmed Xfinity Technician Appointment (With a Real Confirmation Number)

Keep Reading
Clay-style illustration of credit card with dispute arrow, gavel, stack of documents, and shield with checkmark
By Lisa Wei

How to Dispute Credit Card Charges at Chase: The Complete 2026 Guide

Keep Reading
Clay-style illustration of robot holding phone receiver, musical notes, lightbulb, star badge, and toolbox
By Faye Gong

7 Unexpected Things AI Assistants Can Actually Do for You

Keep Reading
Clay-style illustration of shipping box with return arrow, magnifying glass over receipt, clock, and coins being returned
By Lisa Wei

How to Get an Amazon Refund When Your Return Gets Lost or Misprocessed

Keep Reading