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Wing Mirror Theft Has Got So Bad, Owners Are Bagging Them

Wing Mirror Theft Has Got So Bad, Owners Are Bagging Them

Forget stolen catalytic converters or wheels getting jacked overnight. Amsterdam has a wing mirror theft epidemic, specifically, the kind packed with cameras, blind spot sensors, and heating elements found on high-end luxury cars. A recent Instagram reel highlighting the bagged-up mirrors lining ...

Autoblog News

April 4, 2026

Show Notes

Forget stolen catalytic converters or wheels getting jacked overnight. Amsterdam has a wing mirror theft epidemic, specifically, the kind packed with cameras, blind spot sensors, and heating elements found on high-end luxury cars. A recent Instagram reel highlighting the bagged-up mirrors lining the city's streets has struck a nerve. The comments are full of drivers saying the same thing is happening in their city. Faced with a problem that police are still struggling to get ahead of, Amsterdam drivers have landed on a solution that is almost beautifully low-tech. They're wrapping their mirrors in bags secured with bike locks, making the mirrors difficult and slow to dismantle quickly.

Why a Wing Mirror Is Now Worth Stealing

A modern wing mirror on a luxury or electric vehicle is barely recognizable as the simple glass-and-plastic unit from 20 years ago. Today's versions contain wide-angle cameras feeding into parking assist and surround-view systems, blind spot detection warning lights, auto-dimming glass, heated elements, and memory positioning motors. A replacement mirror assembly on a Tesla Model 3 or BMW 5 Series can run anywhere from $800 to over $2,000 at a dealership, and that's before labor. On some larger SUVs and high-spec trim levels, the figure climbs past $3,000. Thieves know this. They can strip a mirror in under two minutes using basic tools, and the parts move easily through gray-market channels, sold online or through unscrupulous body shops as cheaper alternatives to OEM dealer pricing. The stolen mirror that cost someone $1,500 to replace might fetch $400 cash with no questions asked.

exploreamsterdamwithme/Instagram

View the 2 images of this gallery on the original article

Bagging The Mirror Is the Last Line of Defense

For owners of Porsches, Ferraris, and other high-value cars who'd rather not have a baggie flapping off a six-figure vehicle, dedicated products like the ProKevLock have emerged as the more presentable solution. Around $180 a pair, these Kevlar-and-steel-mesh covers lock around the mirror housing with a cable system that's designed to be nearly impossible to cut through with the tools a street thief would realistically carry.

Prokevlock

The logic is simple: thieves working fast in public need a clean, quick grab. A bagged mirror that requires extra time and tools to remove raises the risk of getting caught, so they move on. It won't win any design awards, but in a city where your mirror might be gone by morning, a simple baggie is starting to look like pretty smart engineering.

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