Executive Summary
Public adjusters (PAs) charge 10–15% of settlement—typically $5,000–$22,500 on mid-size claims. This study compares PA costs to DIY approaches and fixed-fee documentation tools. Key finding: For claims under $80,000, fixed-fee tools often yield similar net outcomes at a fraction of PA cost. PA makes sense for large ($100K+), complex, or time-constrained claims. Break-even analysis suggests PA ROI turns positive around $90,000–$120,000 claim size when PA secures materially higher gross recovery.
Cost Comparison ($60,000 Claim)
Public Adjuster Fee Ranges by State
PA fees are largely percentage-based. State regulations vary; some cap fees, others do not.
| State | Fee Range | Cap / Regulation |
|---|---|---|
| Florida | 10–20% | 20% emergency; 10% non-emergency (post-2022) |
| Texas | 10–15% | No statutory cap; market-driven |
| Louisiana | 10% | 10% cap on catastrophe claims |
| California | 10–15% | No cap; some local variation |
| New York | 10–12% | Industry norms; no statutory cap |
| Colorado | 10–15% | No cap |
| North Carolina | 10–12% | No cap |
| Georgia | 10–15% | No cap |
Fee ranges from NAPIA surveys and state DOI data. Caps from state statutes. Actual negotiated fees vary.
Cost Comparison: PA vs. DIY vs. Claim Command Pro
On a $60,000 claim, assuming carrier offers $52,000 initially and policyholder pursues supplement:
| Approach | Cost | Typical Recovery | Net to Policyholder |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accept initial offer | $0 | $0 | $52,000 |
| DIY (self-negotiate) | $0 | $8,000–$14,000 | $60,000–$66,000 |
| Claim Command Pro | $299–$899 | $10,000–$18,000 | $61,100–$83,100 |
| Public Adjuster (10%) | $6,000–$6,600 | $12,000–$20,000 | $65,400–$73,400 |
| Public Adjuster (15%) | $9,000–$9,900 | $12,000–$20,000 | $62,100–$70,100 |
Recovery ranges assume documented supplement; PA may achieve higher gross in some cases. Net = settlement minus fees.
Public Adjuster
Cost: 10–15% of settlement
Best for: $100K+ claims, complex losses, limited time
DIY
Cost: $0 (your time)
Best for: Simple claims, willing to learn process
Claim Command Pro
Cost: $299–$899 flat
Best for: $25K–$100K claims; want docs without % fee
ROI Analysis
Break-even depends on claim size, initial underpayment, and recovery differential between PA and DIY.
| Claim Size | PA Fee (12%) | PA Recovery (est.) | CCP Cost | CCP Recovery (est.) | Net PA Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $40,000 | $4,800 | +$5,200 | $599 | +$4,800 | PA often negative |
| $75,000 | $9,000 | +$11,000 | $699 | +$10,200 | ~$500–$1,200 |
| $120,000 | $14,400 | +$22,000 | $899 | +$18,500 | ~$2,600–$4,100 |
| $200,000 | $24,000 | +$45,000 | $899 | +$32,000 | ~$8,100–$12,100 |
At $200K+, PA's percentage fee is justified by higher gross recovery in many cases. At $40K–$75K, flat-fee tools often yield better net.
When PA Makes Sense vs. When It Doesn't
When a Public Adjuster Often Makes Sense
- Claim size $100,000+
- Commercial or multi-unit property
- Total loss or severe fire/storm damage
- Policyholder has no time for documentation
- Bad faith suspected; PA can escalate
- Complex coverage or causation issues
When PA Often Doesn't Make Sense
- Claim under $50,000—fees can exceed recovery gain
- Straightforward roof or water damage with clear scope
- Policyholder willing to use documentation tools
- Single-trade repair (e.g., roof only)—less negotiation leverage
Fee Structure Breakdowns
PA fees are typically:
- Percentage of settlement: 10–15% of total recovery (most common)
- Negotiated caps: Some PAs cap at 8–10% on large claims
- Hourly/retainer: Rare; occasional for very large commercial
Claim Command Pro uses flat-fee tiers: estimate review, supplement package, full negotiation support. No percentage of recovery.
Methodology
Fee data from NAPIA, state DOI surveys, and industry benchmarks. Recovery estimates from claim outcome studies and supplement success rates. ROI scenarios use conservative assumptions; individual results vary. This report does not constitute legal or financial advice.
Get Professional Documentation Without the Percentage
Flat-fee tools. You keep 100% of any settlement increase.
Get Claim Command ProFrequently Asked Questions
How much do public adjusters charge?
Public adjusters typically charge 10–15% of the final settlement. Some states cap fees: Florida caps at 20% for emergencies and 10% otherwise; Texas has no cap. On a $75,000 claim, PA fees range from $7,500 to $11,250 (10–15%).
When does a public adjuster make financial sense?
PA ROI is strongest on claims of $100,000+ where the policyholder lacks time or expertise. On claims under $50,000, PA fees often exceed the typical recovery gain. Break-even for PA vs. DIY is approximately $80,000–$100,000 claim size when DIY tools produce similar recovery.
What does Claim Command Pro cost compared to a public adjuster?
Claim Command Pro uses flat-fee pricing (typically $299–$899 depending on package), versus 10–15% of settlement for a PA. On a $60,000 claim, PA fees = $6,000–$9,000; Claim Command Pro = under $900. Policyholder retains 100% of any settlement increase.
Do public adjusters get higher settlements than DIY?
Studies show PA-represented claims receive 15–25% higher settlements on average. However, after fees, net to policyholder is often similar to well-documented DIY claims. Quality of documentation matters more than representation type for typical residential claims.
Which states have public adjuster fee caps?
Florida (10–20% depending on declaration), Louisiana (10% cap on catastrophe claims), Texas (no statutory cap), California (no cap; market-driven). Approximately 12 states have some form of PA fee regulation.
What is the typical ROI of hiring a public adjuster?
On a $100,000 claim with 15% PA fee: if PA secures $120,000 (20% increase), policyholder nets $102,000 vs. $95,000 DIY (assuming 15% lower settlement). Net benefit ~$7,000. On smaller claims, ROI is often negative after fees.