Your Car Lost Thousands in Value. Insurance Owes It Back.
After any accident — even with a perfect repair — your car is worth thousands less on the open market. Carfax data shows accident-history vehicles lose 10–25% of their value. Most people never claim this money.
This is called diminished value, and the at-fault driver's insurance is legally required to pay it under Utah law (Code §31A-22-309). You have 4 years to file (Code §78B-2-307).
What Is Diminished Value?
Most people have never heard of it. But it's real money — and it's yours.
Your car has a clean Carfax. Buyers pay full market value — no questions asked.
Even after a flawless repair, the accident is permanently recorded on Carfax and every other vehicle history report.
Looks identical — but 39% of buyers won't even consider it. You lost real, tangible money.
Has Your Car Lost Value After an Accident?
Diminished Value and Loss of Use ARE recoverable
- No accident history on record
- Buyers pay full asking price
- Dealers offer top trade-in value
- Accident history recorded forever
- 39% of buyers won't consider it
- Dealers discount 10-25% at trade-in
The permanent loss in your car's market value after the accident — even after a flawless repair. The at-fault driver's insurance owes you this money.
Rental car costs (or equivalent daily value) for every day your vehicle was in the shop. Owed whether you actually rented a car or not.
Based on a 2022 Toyota Camry SE — actual values vary by vehicle, damage severity, and market conditions.
The Data Proves Diminished Value Is Real
These aren't our numbers. This is published research from the automotive industry's most trusted data sources — the same sources insurance companies use internally.
Vehicles with one or more reported accidents lose 10–25% of market value. Minor damage averages ~$500 reduction; severe/structural damage averages $2,100+.
Based on actual dealer transaction data across millions of vehicle sales.
of car buyers would not purchase a vehicle with accident history regardless of repair quality.
This buyer stigma is the core driver of diminished value — even a flawless repair cannot erase the record.
value loss for salvage-titled vehicles. Rebuilt titles see 20–50% reduction. Any branded title can cut value by 50%+.
Even non-structural accidents create permanent value loss once recorded on vehicle history reports.
Utah Law Protects Your Diminished Value Claim
Diminished value isn't a loophole or legal trick. It's established Utah property damage law. Here are the specific statutes that protect your right to full compensation.
4-Year Statute of Limitations
You have four years from the date of the accident to file a property damage claim, including diminished value. File early — fresher claims with current market data negotiate better.
Minimum Property Damage Coverage
All Utah drivers must carry a minimum of $15,000 in property damage liability coverage. The at-fault driver's policy covers your diminished value claim separately from repair costs.
Unfair Claims Settlement Practices
Insurers must investigate and settle claims fairly within 30 days. Failure to acknowledge or pay a valid diminished value claim may constitute an unfair claims practice under Utah law.
What If I Was Partially at Fault?
Utah follows a modified comparative faultsystem. If you are less than 50% at fault, you can still recover diminished value — reduced proportionally by your fault percentage. For example, if your DV is $5,000 and you're 20% at fault, you'd recover $4,000. We factor this into every claim we file.
What Our Clients Actually Recover
Each bar shows post-repair value (blue) plus the diminished value the insurance company owed — and paid (orange).
From Accident to Paycheck
Four steps. We handle three of them — all you do is call us.
Accident Happens
The at-fault driver's insurance pays for repairs. Your car looks perfect — but something invisible changed permanently. The accident is now on your vehicle's permanent record.
Value Drops Permanently
The moment accident records hit Carfax, buyers pay less. Carfax transaction data shows accident-history vehicles sell for 10–25% less than comparable clean-history vehicles, regardless of repair quality.
Insurance Owes You This Money
Under Utah Code §31A-22-309, the at-fault driver's insurance is legally required to compensate you for property damage — including diminished value. They will never volunteer it. You have to claim it within 4 years (Utah Code §78B-2-307).
We Prove the Exact Amount
Our USPAP-certified appraisers use Black Book dealer data, real comparable sales, and industry methodology to calculate your loss. We prepare a formal demand and negotiate directly with the insurance company on your behalf.
The Numbers Speak for Themselves
30+ years of Utah property damage claims experience.
What Insurers Say — and the Truth
Adjusters use these lines every day to avoid paying DV. Know what to expect.
"Your car was fully repaired — it's worth the same."
Carfax data shows accident-history vehicles sell for 10–25% less than identical clean-history vehicles. The damage report follows your car forever — even after a flawless repair. Edmunds found 39% of buyers reject accident-history vehicles outright.
"Diminished value claims aren't worth the hassle."
Our clients recover an average of $4,800 per claim. That's a real check in your pocket for a single phone call and a $350 flat-fee appraisal. We handle everything from documentation to negotiation.
"You need a lawyer to file a DV claim."
You need a certified vehicle appraiser, not necessarily a lawyer. We handle the entire claim — appraisal, demand, negotiation. If the insurance company won’t settle fairly, we work with partner law firms including LawyerUp, the Brad DeBry Law Firm, and Craig Swapp & Associates to take them to court. About 50% of our cases end up in litigation because we don’t back down.
"The insurance company will tell you if you're owed DV."
Insurers never volunteer DV payments. Under Utah Admin Rule R590-190, they must settle claims fairly — but that doesn't mean they'll tell you about additional compensation you're entitled to. You must claim it. Most accident victims never do.
How Each Insurance Company Handles DV Claims
Every insurer has different tactics for minimizing your diminished value payout. We've handled claims against all of them and know exactly how to counter each one.
State Farm
Relies heavily on the 17c formula to minimize DV payouts. Often denies DV claims outright on first attempt.
Always respond with a formal demand letter backed by an independent appraisal. State Farm adjusters have settlement authority — persistence pays off.
GEICO
Frequently offers 50–60% of actual diminished value. Uses in-house valuation tools that undercount comparable sales.
GEICO responds well to data-driven appraisals. Present Black Book and comparable sales data to counter their internal numbers.
Progressive
Uses a percentage-based DV formula that doesn't reflect actual market loss. May delay claims hoping you'll accept a lowball offer.
Challenge their comparable vehicle selections. Request the itemized valuation report and dispute each comparable.
Allstate
Known for aggressive claim management. May initially deny DV claims exist under your policy type.
Reference Utah Code §31A-22-309 and R590-190 in your demand. Allstate adjusters often settle when presented with regulatory compliance concerns.
USAA
Generally more fair but still uses internal formulas that undervalue DV. Total loss offers are closer to fair market value but still worth challenging.
USAA members often get better results with a professional appraisal. Present a USPAP-compliant report and they typically negotiate in good faith.
Farmers
May deny DV claims by claiming repairs restored the vehicle to pre-loss condition. Uses outdated market data.
Counter with Carfax market data showing accident-history vehicles sell for 10–25% less regardless of repair quality.
How We Calculate Your Diminished Value
No guesswork. No formulas pulled from a website. Our process uses the same professional standards required for court testimony and accepted by every major insurer.
Black Book Dealer Data
We pull real-time wholesale and retail values from Black Book — the same database used by banks, lenders, and dealerships to price vehicles. Not Kelley Blue Book estimates. Not Edmunds suggestions. Actual transaction data.
Local Comparable Sales
We identify vehicles matching your exact year, make, model, trim, mileage, and condition that have sold in the Utah market. These real-world comparables document what your car was actually worth before the accident.
USPAP-Certified Standards
Every appraisal follows USPAP (Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice) — the same framework used in court-admissible property appraisals. This certification gives your claim legal weight that insurance companies recognize.
Formal Demand & Negotiation
We prepare a professional demand package documenting the before/after value gap with full supporting data. Then we negotiate directly with the insurance adjuster until settlement. Most claims resolve in 30–60 days.
Estimate Your Diminished Value
Get a ballpark estimate of what your diminished value claim could be worth. This calculator uses industry averages — for the exact figure, our USPAP-certified appraisers use Black Book dealer data and local Utah comparable sales.
Why an Estimate Isn't Enough
- Insurance companies reject estimates — they need certified appraisals
- Black Book dealer data is 2-3x more accurate than online calculators
- Local Utah market data changes the number significantly
- Our $350 appraisal typically recovers 10-20x its cost
Diminished Value Estimator
Get a rough estimate. For an exact figure, we use Black Book dealer data.
Attorney Explains Diminished Value Claims
Watch our legal expert break down exactly how diminished value works, what you're entitled to under Utah law, and how the claims process works from start to finish.
Attorney Explains Diminished Value Claims in Utah
Video coming soon
Have questions after watching? Contact us or call 801-799-9999.
Diminished Value — Your Questions Answered
Everything you need to know about filing a diminished value claim in Utah.
Diminished value is the difference in your car's market value before and after an accident. Even after a perfect repair, your car is worth less because it has accident history on Carfax. Carfax transaction data shows this loss ranges from 10–25% depending on severity. This loss is money the at-fault driver's insurance legally owes you under Utah property damage law.
Most claims range from $3,000–$8,000. High-value vehicles (luxury, trucks, newer models) can see $10,000–$20,000+. The amount depends on your vehicle's year, make, model, pre-accident value, severity of damage, mileage, and local market conditions. We use Black Book dealer data to calculate the exact figure.
The at-fault driver's liability insurance pays your DV claim. Under Utah Code §31A-22-309, all drivers must carry minimum property damage liability coverage of $15,000. Your DV claim is completely separate from repair costs — it's additional compensation for the permanent loss in your vehicle's market value.
Utah Code §78B-2-307 provides a 4-year statute of limitations for property damage claims, starting from the date of the accident. File as soon as repairs are complete — fresher claims are easier to document and negotiate, and market data is more accurate when the claim is recent.
No. Property Damage Pros handles DV claims as USPAP-certified appraisers. We prepare the certified appraisal using Black Book data, submit the formal demand, and negotiate directly with the insurance company. No lawyers needed. If the claim requires litigation (rare), we can refer you to a qualified attorney.
Our diminished value appraisal is $350 flat. No hidden fees. No percentage of recovery. No contingency. You keep 100% of what we win from the insurance company. Most clients recover 10–20x the appraisal fee.
Utah follows a modified comparative fault system. If you are less than 50% at fault, you can still recover diminished value — reduced by your percentage of fault. For example, if you're 20% at fault and your DV is $5,000, you'd recover $4,000. We factor this into your claim strategy.
We use Black Book wholesale and retail dealer data (the same data used by banks and lenders), actual comparable vehicle sales in the local market, condition adjustments based on your vehicle's specifics, and the Carfax-documented severity of the accident. Our methodology follows USPAP (Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice) standards.
Find Out What You're Owed — Free
Most claims take under 10 minutes to evaluate. Tell us about your accident and we'll give you the real number.
Get Your Free Diminished Value Estimate
No cost. No obligation. Just the real number — so you can decide.