Insurance companies have a legal duty to handle claims fairly. When they don't—when they unreasonably delay, underpay, or misrepresent—you may have a bad faith claim worth 2-3x your original settlement.
⚠️ Bad faith laws vary by state. This is general information, not legal advice. If you believe your insurer has acted in bad faith, consult an insurance attorney in your state. Document everything—dates, correspondence, what you submitted, and how the carrier responded.
Every insurance policy includes an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The insurer must evaluate claims honestly, pay what is owed in a reasonable time, and not place its financial interests ahead of yours. When an insurer deliberately or unreasonably violates this duty, it may be liable for bad faith.
Bad faith is more than a low offer. It's a pattern of conduct: refusing to consider evidence, misrepresenting policy language, delaying without cause, or systematically undervaluing claims when documentation supports higher payment. Proving it requires evidence—which is why documentation from day one matters. See our property damage documentation blueprint and negotiation guide to build your case.
Full amount you were owed under the policy—often $20,000-$75,000+ on property claims
Consequential losses: extra living expenses, interest, costs caused by delay
In egregious cases, courts can award 2-3x or more to punish the insurer
Bad faith claims are serious. Insurers know that losing a bad faith case can cost far more than paying the original claim. That's why documenting unfair conduct and consulting an attorney early can change the outcome.
Consult an insurance bad faith attorney when:
Most bad faith attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency—you pay nothing upfront; they take a percentage of recovery. The consultation is confidential. Bring your policy, all correspondence, estimates, and a timeline of events.
From the moment you file your claim, document:
This record becomes evidence. It shows the pattern of conduct that may constitute bad faith.
In many states, you must use your policy's dispute resolution options (such as appraisal) before suing for bad faith. Failing to invoke appraisal can weaken or bar your bad faith claim. Document your attempts to resolve the claim—demand letters, appraisal invocation, Department of Insurance complaints—before turning to litigation. An attorney can advise on the proper sequence for your state.
Bad faith law differs significantly by state. Some states have statutes that define bad faith and specify damages; others rely on common law. A few states allow first-party bad faith (suing your own insurer) only in limited circumstances. Your attorney will know the rules in your jurisdiction and can advise whether you have a viable claim.
Strong documentation strengthens both negotiation and potential legal claims. Get the tools to document your case properly.
Start Your Claim ReviewNot every low offer is bad faith. Carriers can have legitimate disagreements over scope or value. Bad faith typically requires evidence of unreasonableness: refusing to consider evidence, deliberate delay, misrepresentation, or conduct that shows the carrier put its interests ahead of yours. If you're unsure, an attorney can evaluate whether your situation crosses the line.
Bad faith occurs when an insurer unreasonably fails to pay a valid claim, deliberately underpays, unreasonably delays, misrepresents policy terms, or fails to investigate. Examples: refusing to pay documented covered damage, offering 40-60% below documented cost without justification, ignoring submitted documentation, or falsely claiming something isn't covered when policy language says it is. Laws vary by state—consult an attorney for your situation.
Successful bad faith plaintiffs often recover the full amount owed (contract damages) plus consequential damages (extra costs caused by the delay), emotional distress in some states, and punitive damages where the insurer's conduct was egregious. Total recovery can be 2-3 times your underlying claim, or more with punitives. Amounts vary by state law and case specifics.
Yes. Bad faith claims are complex and require knowledge of insurance law, your state's statutes, and litigation strategy. Most bad faith attorneys work on contingency (no upfront fee; they take a percentage of recovery). Consult an insurance bad faith attorney if you believe the carrier has acted in bad faith—they can evaluate your case and advise on next steps.
Document everything: all correspondence, dates of contact, what was said, what you submitted, and how the carrier responded. Evidence of unreasonableness includes: internal carrier documents (obtained through discovery), expert testimony on proper claims handling, and comparison of your documented proof to the carrier's offer. An attorney can help identify and gather the right evidence.
In most states, you can pursue bad faith while still seeking payment of the underlying claim. Some jurisdictions require you to first obtain a judgment or appraisal award establishing the amount owed before bad faith damages attach. An attorney in your state can advise on the proper sequence and strategy.