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Denied my diminished value claim so I took the at-fault driver to small claims — and won

Wanted to post this because I spent weeks searching for anyone who'd actually gone through this and came out the other side okay. Maybe this helps someone.

Back in the spring, a driver ran a red light and clipped the entire passenger side of my car while I was heading home from work. 100% their fault — witness statements, traffic cam footage, the whole thing. Their insurance accepted liability pretty quickly, which felt like a win at the time.

Repairs took about six weeks at a body shop my insurance recommended. New door panels, repainting, structural realignment — not a small job. Once everything was done I hired an independent appraiser to assess the diminished value. For those who don't know, that's the gap between what your car was worth before the accident and what it's worth after, even with perfect repairs. The appraiser came back with a number I felt was fair, so I submitted a formal DV claim to the at-fault driver's insurance.

They denied it. No negotiation, no counter. Just a form letter saying my vehicle's mileage and age made it ineligible under their internal guidelines. That's not how diminished value law works in my state, but okay.

So I filed in small claims against the at-fault driver directly. Served the paperwork, set the court date, and started organizing my evidence binder.

About three weeks before the hearing, the insurance company called me out of nowhere offering to settle — but for less than my original demand. I told them we'd see each other in court. Two days later they came back and agreed to my full amount.

A few things I learned:

  • Get a professional appraisal. It gives you credibility.
  • Small claims is not that scary. The filing fee was minimal.
  • Insurance companies sometimes ignore DV claims hoping you'll give up.
  • Suing the driver (not the insurer) is the move — the insurer then has strong incentive to settle.

Happy to answer questions if anyone's going through something similar.

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9 replies

  • 12
    calm-crow-167

    I'll be honest — I worked in claims for years and DV denials like the one you got are often the path of least resistance for adjusters. If the claimant doesn't escalate, the file closes and everyone moves on. Once a small claims filing hits the system, it gets bumped to a different team entirely and suddenly settlement authority opens up that wasn't 'available' before. You played it exactly right.

    • 3
      clear-grouse-161

      Not legal advice, but this is a solid real-world example of how diminished value claims can play out. DV is a legitimate category of damages in most states and insurance companies know it — they just don't advertise that. One thing worth noting: rules around DV vary a lot by state, so if anyone's considering this route it's worth a quick consult to understand what applies where you are. But OP's general approach — professional appraisal, written demand, small claims filing — is pretty textbook.

    • 10
      clever-sparrow-412

      The fact that you documented everything from the start — witness info, the cam footage, the appraisal — that's what made all the difference. A lot of people don't think about documentation until it's too late. You were set up to win before you even filed.

  • 4
    plain-otter-244

    This is almost exactly what happened to me two years ago. I got the denial letter and just... accepted it because I didn't know I had other options. Wish I'd found something like this post back then. You did the right thing not taking their lowball call-back offer — that was them testing you.

    • 2
      humble-lynx-082

      The 'mileage and age' denial is one of their go-to moves. It sounds official but it's basically a made-up internal policy they use to filter out people who won't push back. They're counting on most folks not knowing their rights or not wanting the hassle of filing paperwork. The moment you showed you were serious, they folded. Classic.

    • 7
      tidy-wren-446

      Just want to add for anyone reading: the strategy of suing the at-fault driver rather than the insurance company directly is important. In most states you can't sue the insurer directly in a case like this — but when you sue the driver, their insurer has a duty to defend them, which means the insurer is now very motivated to make it go away before a court date. The small claims filing essentially forces their hand.

    • 3
      bold-fox-391

      Did the appraiser you hired have any specific certifications or was it just someone advertising DV appraisals online? Asking because I've heard the quality varies a lot and I'd imagine the insurance company could challenge the methodology if they wanted to.

  • 4
    warm-fox-263

    The evidence binder detail matters more than people think. Show up with your appraisal report, the repair invoices, photos of the damage, and the denial letter in a neat organized folder and you look prepared and credible. Judges in small claims see a lot of disorganized plaintiffs. Standing out is half the battle.

  • 3
    swift-grouse-362

    Honestly this whole thread is making me realize how much I don't know about what to do after an accident. I'm saving this. So glad it worked out for you — dealing with insurance while also recovering from the stress of an accident sounds exhausting.