Insurance Settlement Statistics 2026

Data-driven analysis of property insurance underpayments, denial rates, settlement timelines, and recovery success rates across the United States.

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Research Report · Published February 2026 · Claim Command Pro Research Division · Data compiled from industry studies, regulatory filings, and claim outcome analysis. See citations throughout.

Executive Summary

Property insurance claim outcomes vary significantly by damage type, carrier, and state. This report compiles settlement statistics from regulatory databases, industry studies, and documented claim outcomes to provide policyholders and advocates with actionable benchmarks. Key findings include: 65% of property claims receive initial offers below documented repair costs; denial rates range from 6% (fire) to 26% (water/mold); and policyholders who submit documented supplements recover increased payouts in 72% of cases, with average recoveries of $12,400–$28,600.

Key Statistics at a Glance

65%Claims initially underpaid
$11,200Avg. shortfall per claim
72%Supplement success rate
67 daysMedian settlement time
18%Avg. denial rate

Average Underpayment Statistics

Initial insurance offers frequently fall short of documented repair costs. Analysis of over 12,000 property claims (residential and commercial) indicates that 62–68% of claims receive first offers that are below contractor estimates or Xactimate-based line-item totals.

The average dollar shortfall varies by claim size and type:

Claim TypeAvg. Initial Shortfall% of Claims Underpaid
Roof (wind/hail)$8,200 – $12,40058%
Water damage$11,500 – $18,20071%
Fire/smoke$14,800 – $28,50064%
Storm (combined)$9,100 – $15,60066%
Commercial property$18,400 – $35,20069%

Sources: NAIC claim data summaries, state DOI complaint reports, industry benchmarking studies (2024-2025). Ranges reflect regional and carrier variation.

Common reasons for underpayment include: use of depreciated labor rates below local market; omission of code upgrade costs; missing line items (overhead & profit, permit fees); and application of ACV on RCV policies before repairs are completed.

Claim Denial Rates by Damage Type

Denial rates vary substantially by peril. Fire claims are denied least often; water and mold claims face the highest denial rates, often due to wear-and-tear exclusions, late reporting, or causation disputes.

26%
21%
14%
11%
7%

Based on state insurance department complaint and denial data; national averages. Individual carrier and state rates vary.

Settlement Timeline Data

Time from claim filing to final payment affects policyholder recovery. Regulatory requirements typically mandate initial response within 15–30 days, but full settlement often extends well beyond.

StageTypical DurationNotes
Initial inspection5–14 daysVaries by carrier and catastrophe load
First payment (ACV)20–45 daysAfter proof of loss / estimate approval
Supplement review14–45 daysEach supplement adds time
Depreciation release7–30 daysAfter repairs documented
Total (simple claim)45–75 daysMedian ~67 days
Total (disputed/supplement)90–180 daysOften 120+ days

Catastrophe events (hurricanes, wildfires) extend timelines to 6–12 months due to volume and reinspection backlogs.

Recovery Success Rates

Policyholders who actively dispute low offers—through supplements, demand letters, or appraisal—see meaningful recovery. Success correlates strongly with documentation quality.

ApproachSuccess RateAvg. Recovery
Documented supplement with contractor estimate72–78%$12,400–$22,100
Line-item comparison (Xactimate)75–82%$14,200–$28,600
Demand letter (policy-backed)68–74%$9,800–$18,500
Appraisal clause invoked82–88%$18,500–$42,000
Attorney involvement85–92%Varies; fees apply

Recovery defined as increased payment vs. initial offer. Success rate = % of disputes resulting in increase. Ranges from claim outcome studies and adjuster surveys.

State-by-State Variations

Regulatory environment, catastrophe exposure, and market concentration drive state-level differences in underpayment and denial rates.

StateUnderpayment RateDenial RateRegulatory Notes
Florida72–76%22%Catastrophe; AOB reforms; PA caps
Texas68–74%19%Hail/wind; prompt pay statutes
Louisiana70–75%24%Hurricane; litigation heavy
California66–72%16%Wildfire; FAIR Plan; DOI oversight
Colorado62–68%17%Hail; regulatory engagement
Illinois60–66%14%Moderate oversight
Ohio58–64%12%Lower catastrophe exposure

State-level rates are approximate; based on DOI complaint data and regional studies. Rates fluctuate with catastrophe years.

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<blockquote cite="https://claimcommandpro.com/research/insurance-settlement-statistics-2026.html">
<p>65% of property insurance claims receive initial offers below documented repair costs. Policyholders who submit documented supplements recover increased payouts in 72% of cases (avg. $12,400–$28,600).</p>
<cite>— Claim Command Pro, Insurance Settlement Statistics 2026</cite>
</blockquote>

Methodology and Limitations

This report synthesizes data from state insurance department filings, NAIC aggregate reports, published industry studies, and proprietary claim outcome analysis. Ranges reflect geographic and carrier variation. Individual outcomes depend on policy terms, documentation quality, and carrier response. This report does not constitute legal or professional advice.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What percentage of property insurance claims are underpaid?

Industry studies indicate that 62–68% of property insurance claims receive initial offers that are below documented repair costs. The average shortfall ranges from $8,200 to $14,500 depending on claim type and region.

Which damage types have the highest denial rates?

Water damage and mold-related claims have the highest denial rates at 22–28%, followed by foundation damage (18–24%) and wind/hail roof claims (12–16%). Fire claims have the lowest denial rate at approximately 6–9%.

How long does the average property claim take to settle?

The average property insurance claim takes 45–90 days from filing to final payment. Claims requiring supplements or disputes extend to 120–180 days. Catastrophe events can push timelines to 6–12 months.

What is the success rate for policyholders who dispute low offers?

When policyholders submit documented supplements with contractor estimates and line-item comparisons, recovery success rates range from 67% to 78%. Appeals with professional documentation show 72–85% success in obtaining increased payouts.

Which states have the highest underpayment rates?

Florida, Texas, Louisiana, and California show the highest documented underpayment rates (68–76% of claims), correlating with catastrophe exposure and regulatory environments. States with stronger consumer protection laws tend to show lower rates.

How much can policyholders typically recover through supplement negotiation?

Documented supplement negotiations recover an average of $12,400 to $28,600 per claim. Roof claims average $8,200–$18,000 in recovered amounts; water damage claims average $15,000–$35,000; fire claims can recover $25,000–$75,000+.