
There is a particular silence on the phone when you ask a body shop the right question. The good shops fill that silence with detailed explanations. The wrong ones fill it with reassurance, warm and empty. Finding a real Porsche body shop takes more than reading reviews. You want one that has actually opened up a 911 rather than admired one in traffic. That comes down to asking questions where reassurance cannot pass for knowledge.
So this post is an interview script. Six questions, why each one matters on a Porsche in ways it might not on another car, and what a good answer sounds like. Any Porsche body shop worth your time will enjoy the conversation. Admittedly, the ones that get defensive are answering too, just not with words.
Question 1: How Do You Handle the Aluminum in This Body?
Modern 911s mix aluminum and steel, bonded and riveted together. Aluminum doors, hoods, and fenders run across much of the range. Aluminum needs its own tools and its own space, away from steel dust. Mix the two, and rust gets a head start where the metals meet. A shop without that separation should not touch the car, and plenty of otherwise decent shops fall into that category without knowing it.
Listen for specifics. A good answer mentions dedicated aluminum tools, a separate work area, and repair-versus-replace decisions that follow Porsche’s own structure. A vague “we work on everything” is the phone silence again, dressed up. Every shop works on everything until an aluminum fender needs a decision.

Question 2: How Will You Match My Exact Paint?
Porsche paint is where average shops sink fast. Colors vary by production year and plant. Metallics shift with spray angle. Paint-to-sample cars carry colors the mixing computer has never met. Matching means pulling the code, spraying test cards, and blending into the panels next door. The repair has to vanish under sunlight and streetlights.
Ask what happens if the first mix comes out wrong. The answer you want involves tinting and re-spraying cards until it is right. The answer you do not want is a shrug and a promise that nobody will notice. Somebody always notices. On a GT Silver 911, everyone notices, including you, every single morning, from the exact angle where the blend went wrong.
Question 3: What Parts Go on the Car, and Who Decides?
Genuine parts fit the way the factory intended, and on a Porsche, the fit leaves little room for almost. Ask plainly whether the estimate uses genuine parts. Then ask what happens when an insurer suggests something else. Shops handle that conversation with carriers all the time, and the experienced ones document why a given part matters for fit or safety.
One follow-up worth adding: how do you check panel gaps after assembly? A shop that measures gaps and photographs them before teardown, so it can rebuild to the same lines, thinks the way a Porsche owner does.
Question 4: What Gets Scanned and Calibrated When You Finish?
A Cayenne or a current 911 carries radar for adaptive cruise, cameras for lane systems, and parking sensors in both bumpers. Bodywork disturbs them even when nothing looks broken. A bumper that came off and went back on has moved every sensor inside it, no matter how gentle the hands were. Diagnostic scanning before and after the repair matters, plus calibration of anything the work touched. That is the difference between a car that looks finished and one that truly is.
The good answer names the process without prompting. In-house calibration matters here too, since sending the car elsewhere adds days and another set of hands. Fewer hands on a Porsche are nearly always the better plan.

Question 5: Can You Show Me a Porsche You Repaired a While Ago?
Fresh photos flatter everyone. Time judges the work more honestly. So ask to see work that is a year or two old, in person or from a customer willing to share. Look down the side of the car in low light, check the gaps around the repaired panel, and close the door with your eyes shut. Uneven effort shows up in exactly those places. A repaired Porsche door should sound identical to its untouched twin on the other side, and your ear will catch what your eye misses.
Perhaps this feels like a lot to ask of a shop. It is, slightly, and that is the point. Nobody vets a rental car this hard. The reaction to the request tells you nearly as much as the car would.
Taken Together
Relux Collision answers all six of these questions for Sacramento Porsche owners. The shop runs a dedicated luxury tier and does ADAS calibration and diagnostic scanning in-house. It holds I-CAR Gold Class training and backs repairs with a limited lifetime warranty. Start the interview at reluxcollision.com/get-a-quote or call 916-621-5306, Monday through Friday, 8 am to 5 pm. Photos work fine for a first conversation if the car cannot move. Bring the whole list. A shop that has done this work before will treat the questions as a compliment. To a serious shop, an owner who asks is the best kind of customer there is.