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The Shoulder
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bright-finch-924

Can I request a different adjuster mid-claim? Mine is making this so much harder than it needs to be

Okay so I'm already stressed enough dealing with the aftermath of my car getting rear-ended at a red light — neck is still sore, my bumper is basically folded in half, and I'm trying to navigate a claim I've never had to deal with before.

And then there's my adjuster.

I don't even want to be dramatic about it, but every interaction leaves me feeling worse than before I reached out. Some examples:

  • I asked a simple yes/no question about whether a rental was covered under my policy. Got a three-sentence non-answer that didn't address what I asked at all.
  • She told me she'd call me back by end of day. Crickets. Then at 9pm I get an email asking me to submit documentation "as soon as possible."
  • When I asked her to clarify something she'd said on a previous call, she kind of sighed like I was wasting her time.

I genuinely don't think she's a bad person. She's probably juggling 40 claims and is burnt out. I get it. But I'm not getting the help I need and I'm worried mistakes are going to be made on my claim because of these communication breakdowns.

Has anyone actually successfully asked to be reassigned to a different adjuster? Is that even a thing? I don't want to blow anything up or slow down the process — I just want someone who will actually answer my questions. Would going through my own agent (the one who sold me the policy) help at all, or would that backfire somehow?

Any experience with this appreciated. I feel like I'm going in circles.

8replies

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8 replies

  • 12
    kind-grouse-289

    Your state's department of insurance actually has authority over how carriers handle claims — there are regulations around response times and communication standards. I'm not saying file a complaint tomorrow, but knowing that exists gives you leverage. Also yes, looping in your original agent (the one who sold you the policy) can sometimes light a fire. They have relationships inside the company and don't want you leaving over a bad claims experience.

    • 14
      bold-wolf-661

      Call the main line, ask for a supervisor in claims, be polite but direct: 'I need someone who can clearly communicate with me on this claim.' That's it. You're not asking for a favor, you're a customer with a legitimate open claim. Also follow up every phone conversation with a quick email summarizing what was said — keeps everyone honest.

  • 15
    warm-owl-118

    Yes, you can absolutely ask to be reassigned — I did it. I called the main customer service line (not my adjuster directly) and just said I felt the communication wasn't working and asked if there was a supervisor or another rep who could take over. They didn't make a big deal of it. New adjuster was noticeably better. Just stay calm and matter-of-fact when you ask, don't vent about the first person.

    • 15
      gentle-heron-144

      Ugh this sounds exhausting on top of already dealing with the accident and your neck. You shouldn't have to fight for basic communication. Please don't just let it keep going like this — you deserve someone who actually answers your questions.

  • 9
    spry-raven-270

    Worked in claims for years — adjusters carry way too many files and the ones who burn out tend to go on autopilot. The after-hours email thing is 100% automated task reminders from their system, not her actually working. She probably doesn't even know she sent it that late.

    That said, you have every right to escalate. Call in and ask to speak to the adjuster's team lead or unit manager. Frame it as 'I want to make sure my claim stays on track' rather than 'your employee is rude.' They respond way better to the first framing. It's not about throwing her under the bus, it's about getting what you need.

  • 5
    quick-dove-395

    Quick question — is this through your own insurance or the other driver's? Because if it's the other driver's carrier, you have less leverage to demand reassignment since you're technically a third party. If it's your own policy you're paying premiums on, you have way more standing to push back. Makes a difference in how you approach it.

  • 4
    wise-elk-702

    Document everything. Every call, every email, every non-answer. Screenshot those late-night emails with timestamps. If this claim ever gets disputed or they lowball you, that paper trail matters. Adjusters banking on you being too frustrated to push back is basically a strategy at this point.

    • 4
      clear-kestrel-986

      Not legal advice, but from what I see — communication breakdowns during the claims process can lead to real mistakes: missed deadlines, undervalued repairs, gaps in documentation. If you're getting stonewalled on basics like rental coverage, that's worth taking seriously. Escalating to a supervisor is a reasonable first step. If things don't improve, a free consult with a PI attorney costs you nothing and at least you'll know your options.