Being underpaid doesn't mean you're stuck. Policyholders who take the right steps recover an average of $22,000 in additional funds. Here's your roadmap.
⚠️ If you haven't signed a release, you can still recover. Even if you cashed the check, supplemental claims and demand letters work. The average recovery: $15,000-$50,000.
Discovering your insurance claim was underpaid is frustrating. Contractors are telling you the repair will cost $45,000, but the insurance company sent $22,000. You're short $23,000 and the work can't proceed. This situation is common. And it's fixable.
Insurance underpayment happens when carrier estimates exclude scope items, use below-market pricing, or undercount quantities. The gap isn't random—it's documented and recoverable. Policyholders who follow the right process recoup the difference in the majority of cases.
If the insurance company sent a release or proof of loss requiring your signature, do not sign until you're satisfied with the amount. Signing releases your right to additional payment. If you've already signed, your options are more limited—but supplemental claims for newly discovered damage may still be possible.
Cashing a check can sometimes be construed as acceptance of the offer. If you're planning to dispute the amount, hold the check until you've submitted your demand and received a response. When in doubt, consult your policy and consider holding funds in escrow while you negotiate.
Gather the insurance estimate, contractor estimates, photos, and all correspondence. The sooner you document, the stronger your position. Create a timeline of events. Save every email and letter. This evidence supports your demand for additional payment.
Get at least three contractor estimates that itemize the full scope. Compare them line by line to the insurance estimate. Document every missing item, quantity error, and pricing gap. Create a spreadsheet or use comparison tools to quantify the underpayment. The total gap is the amount you're owed.
Write a demand letter that references your policy, itemizes the discrepancies, states the exact additional amount requested, and provides supporting documentation. Set a reasonable deadline—typically 15-30 days. Send it certified mail or via the insurer's claims portal. Keep proof of delivery.
If the adjuster doesn't respond or refuses, contact their supervisor. File a complaint with your state's Department of Insurance—regulators track underpayment patterns and carriers respond to formal complaints. If your policy includes an appraisal clause, invoke it. Appraisal resolves valuation disputes through independent umpires.
Most underpaid claims resolved with proper documentation within 4-8 weeks
Typical additional recovery when scope and pricing gaps are documented
Most cases resolve through demand letters and escalation—save 30-40%
Avoid emotional phone calls without documentation—they rarely produce results. Don't threaten litigation unless you're prepared to follow through. Don't accept verbal promises; get everything in writing. Don't miss deadlines—policies and state law set strict time limits for supplemental claims and appraisal. And don't give up after the first refusal; escalation works when you have proof.
Obtain three detailed estimates. Compare line by line to the insurance estimate. Document every gap—missing scope, underpricing, quantity errors.
Assemble photos, supplier quotes, labor rate documentation, and your line-by-line comparison. Quantify the underpayment in dollars.
Write a professional demand referencing policy language, itemizing discrepancies, and stating the exact amount owed. Set a 15-30 day deadline. Send certified.
If no response: supervisor, then Department of Insurance, then appraisal (if available). Document each step. Persistence with proof produces results.
Claim Command Pro provides the estimate comparison tools, demand templates, and documentation guidance to help you recover from an underpaid claim.
Start Your Claim ReviewDon't cash the check if you haven't already. Gather contractor estimates, perform a line-by-line comparison to the insurance estimate, document all gaps, and submit a formal demand letter requesting the additional amount. Most underpaid claims recover $15,000-$50,000 when properly documented.
Yes. If you haven't signed a final release, you can submit a supplemental claim with documentation proving the underpayment. Even if you cashed a check, a release is what matters. Many policyholders successfully recover additional funds months after the initial payment.
Create a line-by-line comparison of the insurance estimate versus contractor estimates. Document missing scope items, underpriced line items, and quantity errors. Include photos, supplier quotes, and labor rate documentation. The comparison quantifies the underpayment.
Most underpayment disputes resolve without a lawyer when you have proper documentation. Start with a demand letter and evidence. Escalate to the adjuster's supervisor and Department of Insurance before considering legal action. Attorneys typically take 30-40% and are worth it only for larger claims or clear bad faith.
Escalate to the adjuster's supervisor. File a complaint with your state Department of Insurance. If your policy has an appraisal clause, invoke it—appraisal resolves valuation disputes. Document everything. Each escalation step creates leverage.
Yes. Policy terms and state law set deadlines for submitting supplemental claims and invoking appraisal. Typical windows: 60 days to 2 years from loss. Check your policy and act quickly. Don't wait until the deadline—documentation takes time.