Auto-Owners has been penalized for delayed payments and wrongfully withheld depreciation. Here's how to document your claim and recover what you're owed.
⚠️ Auto-Owners was penalized nearly $20,000 for delaying payments over a year. A class action addressed wrongfully withheld depreciation—policyholders could recover 100% of amounts improperly deducted. Document and demand what you're owed.
Auto-Owners faces significant consumer dissatisfaction with claims handling. The Michigan Court of Appeals imposed nearly $20,000 in penalty interest and attorney fees against Auto-Owners for unreasonably delaying no-fault insurance payments on medical bills following a motorcycle accident. The insurer failed to comply with Michigan's strict 30-day payment requirement after receiving reasonable proof of loss, instead taking over a year to process the claim. In a separate matter, Auto-Owners settled a class action lawsuit (Walker v. Auto-Owners Mutual Insurance Co.) involving property insurance claims in Arizona, Illinois, Missouri, and Wisconsin. The settlement addressed claims that the company wrongfully deducted nonmaterial depreciation from structural damage claims, resulting in policyholders receiving smaller payments than owed. Class members could receive refunds of up to 100% of the wrongfully withheld depreciation. Consumer reviews show substantial dissatisfaction—83% of 184 ConsumerAffairs reviews rated Auto-Owners at 1 star. Common complaints center on poor communication during the claims process, unclear explanations of coverage decisions, and issues with claim processing transparency.
Understanding these patterns helps. When you know that delays and improper depreciation deductions occur, you can prepare documentation that demands timely, full payment. Policyholders who submit line-by-line comparisons, contractor estimates, and professional demand letters—and who document every delay in writing—often recover $15,000-$50,000 or more.
Delayed payments and wrongfully withheld depreciation cost policyholders substantially:
Auto-Owners settled for wrongfully deducting nonmaterial depreciation
Class members could recover full amount wrongfully withheld
Michigan imposed ~$20,000 in penalties for 1+ year delay
Documentation and escalation matter. Auto-Owners has been penalized—your proof can force compliance:
If Auto-Owners deducted depreciation from your structural damage claim, verify whether it was proper. The class action involved nonmaterial depreciation. Demand return of any wrongfully withheld amounts with supporting policy language and contractor documentation.
Auto-Owners has been criticized for poor communication. Put every request, follow-up, and deadline in writing. Request written explanations of coverage decisions. Documentation creates a record that supports complaints and regulatory action when Auto-Owners delays or refuses.
If Auto-Owners delays beyond your state's required timeframes, document it and file a complaint with your state Department of Insurance. Michigan imposed significant penalties for a one-year delay. Your state may have similar requirements.
Obtain at least three detailed contractor estimates. Simultaneously, document every delay—date of submission, follow-ups, and Auto-Owners' response times. Put status requests in writing.
If Auto-Owners deducted depreciation, verify it was proper. Compare their estimate against contractor estimates line by line. Create a document showing any wrongfully withheld amounts or undervaluation.
Send a professional demand letter with your comparison, contractor estimates, and policy citations. Request written explanation of any denials or reductions. Set a response deadline.
If Auto-Owners doesn't respond or continues to delay, escalate to a supervisor. File a complaint with your state Department of Insurance. Auto-Owners has been penalized for improper handling—your documentation supports action.
Get the tools and templates to document your Auto-Owners claim. Recover wrongfully withheld depreciation and force timely payment.
Start Your Claim ReviewAuto-Owners settled a class action (Walker v. Auto-Owners Mutual) for wrongfully deducting nonmaterial depreciation from structural damage claims in Arizona, Illinois, Missouri, and Wisconsin. Class members could receive refunds of up to 100% of wrongfully withheld depreciation. If you had a property claim, check whether depreciation was improperly withheld.
Auto-Owners was penalized nearly $20,000 for unreasonably delaying no-fault payments—taking over a year instead of Michigan's 30-day requirement. Document all delays in writing. Request status updates. File a complaint with your state Department of Insurance if Auto-Owners fails to pay within required timeframes.
Submit a line-by-line estimate comparison, contractor estimates, market rate documentation, and a professional demand letter. If Auto-Owners withheld nonmaterial depreciation, demand its return. Poor communication is common—put everything in writing and escalate if needed.
Consumer reviews show frustration with unclear coverage explanations. Request written denials with specific policy citations. Document every conversation. Escalate to a supervisor. File a complaint with your state Department of Insurance—they can require Auto-Owners to provide adequate explanations.
Policyholders who document properly often recover $15,000-$50,000 or more. The depreciation settlement allowed 100% refund of wrongfully withheld amounts. Delays and poor communication compound losses—documentation and escalation can force timely, full payment.
Yes. Document your position with contractor estimates, policy language, and a formal appeal letter. Request a written response with specific policy citations if denied. Escalate to supervisors. File a complaint with your state insurance department. Auto-Owners has been penalized for improper handling.