Self-Help Guide
Insurance Company Traps & Your Coverage Rights
Insurance companies are billion-dollar corporations with one goal after an accident: pay as little as possible. Their adjusters are trained negotiators. You are not. This guide explains what coverage actually exists, how the process works, and every tactic they use against unrepresented claimants.
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Coverage Types Decoded
Every auto policy is a stack of different coverage types. Understanding which ones apply to your accident â and whose policy they come from â determines how much money is actually available to you.
BI â Bodily Injury Liability
The AT-FAULT driver's policyPays for YOUR injuries when someone else causes the accident. This is the main coverage you'll claim against. Every state requires it (except New Hampshire and Virginia with alternatives).
PD â Property Damage Liability
The AT-FAULT driver's policyCovers damage to your vehicle and other property. Separate from your injury claim. Usually handled faster and separately.
PIP â Personal Injury Protection
YOUR OWN policy (required in no-fault states)Pays your medical bills and lost wages regardless of who was at fault. Required in no-fault states (FL, NY, NJ, MI, PA, and others). Typically $10,000â$50,000 in coverage.
MedPay â Medical Payments
YOUR OWN policy (optional in most states)Like PIP but simpler â pays medical bills regardless of fault, no wage loss component. Usually small ($1,000â$10,000) but can help cover immediate costs before a settlement.
UM â Uninsured Motorist
YOUR OWN policyCovers you when the at-fault driver has NO insurance at all (hit and run, uninsured driver). You're essentially filing a claim against your own policy. Your insurer still fights you.
UIM â Underinsured Motorist
YOUR OWN policyCovers the gap when the at-fault driver's BI limits are too low to cover your damages. If they have $25K in coverage but you have $100K in injuries, your UIM can cover the difference.
Umbrella Policy
The AT-FAULT driver's policy (if they have one)An umbrella policy provides additional liability coverage above the base auto limits. Typically $1M+. Common among wealthier individuals and business owners. If the at-fault driver has significant assets, they may have an umbrella.
Policy Limits â Reading the Numbers
Insurance coverage is expressed as three numbers separated by slashes. Most people have no idea what they mean. Here's how to read them.
25 / 50 / 25
$25,000
Max per person injured in one accident
$50,000
Max total for all people injured in one accident
$25,000
Max for all property damage
What happens when your damages exceed the policy limit?
The insurance company will only pay up to their policy limit â period. If you have $150,000 in damages and the at-fault driver has a $25,000 policy, the insurer pays $25,000 and you're left pursuing the driver personally (if they have assets) or your own UIM coverage.
State minimum limits are dangerously low
Florida's minimum is 10/20/10. California's is 15/30/5. A single ER visit for a serious injury can exceed these limits. Always ask your attorney whether the at-fault driver's policy is adequate for your injuries.
â ïļ You have the right to know the policy limits
In most states, you can demand that the at-fault driver's insurer disclose their policy limits. Some states (FL, CA, TX, and others) require disclosure. An attorney can send this demand immediately â knowing the limits is essential to your strategy.
Common State Minimum Limits at a Glance
| State | Min BI (per person) | Min BI (per accident) | No-Fault? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Florida | $10,000 | $20,000 | Yes (PIP required) |
| California | $15,000 | $30,000 | No |
| Texas | $30,000 | $60,000 | No |
| New York | $25,000 | $50,000 | Yes (PIP required) |
| Georgia | $25,000 | $50,000 | No |
| Illinois | $25,000 | $50,000 | No |
| Pennsylvania | $15,000 | $30,000 | Choice (limited/full tort) |
| Ohio | $25,000 | $50,000 | No |
| Michigan | $50,000 | $100,000 | Yes (highest PIP in US) |
| New Jersey | $15,000 | $30,000 | Yes (PIP required) |
Minimums change. Verify current limits with your state's DMV or DOI.
What the Adjuster's Job Actually Is
The adjuster does not work for you.
This sounds obvious, but most people treat the adjuster like a neutral party. They are not. They are a trained claims professional whose job performance is measured by how much money they save their employer â the insurance company.
Their goal
Close your claim for as little as possible
Their tools
Recorded statements, lowball offers, delay tactics, fault arguments, IMEs
Their leverage
You need money now. They can wait.
Insurance adjusters often have:
The 12 Adjuster Traps â And How They Work
The Recorded Statement Request
What they do
The adjuster calls within 24â72 hours and says they "just need a recorded statement to process your claim." They make it sound routine and required.
The reality
You are NOT legally required to give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurer. They will replay your words and use any inconsistency, minimization of pain ("I'm doing okay"), or ambiguous phrasing to reduce or deny your claim.
ðĄïļ Protect yourself: Never give a recorded statement to the at-fault driver's insurer without an attorney.
The Quick Settlement Offer
What they do
Within days of the accident â sometimes at the scene â they offer you a check. It feels generous when you're shaken and in pain. They may pressure you to accept quickly.
The reality
You almost certainly don't know the full extent of your injuries yet. Many serious injuries (disc herniations, nerve damage, TBI symptoms) don't fully present for days or weeks. Once you accept and sign, it's permanent. They know this.
ðĄïļ Protect yourself: Never accept a settlement offer until you are fully treated and know the total cost of your injuries.
The Medical Authorization Trap
What they do
They ask you to sign a "medical authorization" or "HIPAA release" so they can "get your medical records to process the claim."
The reality
A blank or overly broad authorization gives them access to your ENTIRE medical history â not just records related to the accident. They will search for pre-existing conditions, prior injuries, mental health treatment, or anything they can use to argue your injuries are not from the accident.
ðĄïļ Protect yourself: Never sign a broad medical release. Any release should be limited to records specifically related to the accident and injuries at issue.
The "We'll Handle Everything" Promise
What they do
The adjuster says "don't worry, we'll take care of you" and positions themselves as your helper through the process.
The reality
They are building rapport to control the process. By the time you realize their offer is inadequate, you've given statements, signed releases, and may have created a paper trail that hurts your case.
ðĄïļ Protect yourself: Treat every interaction as a negotiation, not a conversation with a helper.
The Comparative Fault Shift
What they do
The adjuster suggests â subtly at first â that you were partially responsible. "You were in the left lane, right?" "Did you have time to brake?" "Was your seatbelt on?"
The reality
In modified comparative fault states (most of the US), if they can establish you were 51% at fault, you get nothing. Even pushing fault to 20â30% significantly reduces your payout. They're trying to get you to say things that establish your fault on record.
ðĄïļ Protect yourself: Don't answer questions about what you were doing before the crash. "I'd prefer to have that conversation with my attorney present."
The Low Mileage / Property Damage Argument
What they do
"Your car only had $1,800 in damage â you couldn't have been seriously hurt." They use low property damage to argue your injuries can't be severe.
The reality
Low-speed impacts absolutely cause serious soft tissue and spinal injuries. Medical research supports this. The amount of vehicle damage has a poor correlation with occupant injury severity â especially in rear-end collisions. Insurance companies know this but use it anyway.
ðĄïļ Protect yourself: Don't let them minimize your injuries based on vehicle damage.
The Treatment Gap Attack
What they do
You missed appointments, waited to see a doctor, or stopped treatment for a few weeks. They use this to argue you're not really injured â "if you were hurting, you would have seen a doctor."
The reality
People miss appointments for real reasons â work, cost, transportation, childcare. But insurance companies will exploit every gap. This is also why they push for quick settlements: before you've been consistently treated.
ðĄïļ Protect yourself: Keep all appointments. If you must miss one, reschedule immediately and document why.
The Social Media Surveillance
What they do
Their investigators â sometimes called Special Investigations Units (SIU) â monitor your public social media profiles and may photograph you in public.
The reality
A photo of you smiling at a birthday party, carrying groceries, or dancing at a wedding will be used as evidence that you're "fine." They may hire private investigators to follow you.
ðĄïļ Protect yourself: Set all profiles to private. Don't post anything. Don't let friends tag you in photos. This is not paranoia â it happens constantly.
The "Pre-Existing Condition" Defense
What they do
They claim your injuries existed before the accident. "You had back pain in 2018 â this isn't from our insured's accident."
The reality
The "eggshell plaintiff" doctrine in most states says the defendant must take the plaintiff as they find them. If their accident aggravated a pre-existing condition, they're still liable for that aggravation. But you need medical evidence proving the accident worsened your condition.
ðĄïļ Protect yourself: Don't hide prior injuries from your doctor. Disclose everything â but also tell your doctor how the accident changed your symptoms.
The Policy Limit Lowball
What they do
They offer you a settlement that sounds large ($18,000) without telling you the actual policy limit is $100,000.
The reality
You have the right to know the policy limits. In many states you can demand them. Without knowing the limit, you can't know if the offer is fair or if there's more available.
ðĄïļ Protect yourself: Always demand disclosure of policy limits before evaluating any offer.
The Final Release Pressure
What they do
"This offer expires in 72 hours." "We can only hold this amount until the end of the week." They create artificial urgency.
The reality
Settlement offers don't actually expire in 72 hours. This is a pressure tactic to stop you from consulting an attorney or getting a second opinion. A legitimate offer is always open to counter-negotiation.
ðĄïļ Protect yourself: Never make decisions about a settlement under time pressure.
The "Let's Skip the Attorney" Suggestion
What they do
"You don't need a lawyer for a claim this size â they'll just take a third of your money." They actively discourage attorney representation.
The reality
The Insurance Research Council found that claimants with attorneys receive 3.5Ã more on average â even after paying a 33% contingency fee. Insurance companies actively discourage attorneys because attorneys know the rules and adjusters can't run their playbook.
ðĄïļ Protect yourself: Any time an insurance adjuster discourages you from getting an attorney, that's your signal to get one immediately.
The "Independent" Medical Exam (IME) â It's Not Independent
When your claim reaches a certain size, the insurance company may require you to see their doctor for an "Independent Medical Examination." The name is deeply misleading.
What an IME doctor actually is:
âĒ A physician who is paid by the insurance company â often $1,500â$5,000 per exam
âĒ They conduct hundreds or thousands of IMEs per year for insurers
âĒ Their reports almost always favor the insurance company â because that's who refers cases to them
âĒ The exam typically lasts 10â20 minutes. Your treating physician has seen you for months.
âĒ Their opinion is used to argue your injuries are "not causally related" or that you've already "reached maximum medical improvement"
âĒ In some states, insurance companies are legally allowed to require an IME. You may not be able to refuse.
If you're required to attend an IME:
When the Other Driver Is Underinsured or Uninsured
Uninsured Driver (UM Claim)
The at-fault driver has zero insurance. You file a claim against your own UM coverage. About 1 in 8 drivers in the US is uninsured.
Underinsured Driver (UIM Claim)
The at-fault driver has insufficient coverage for your damages. You exhaust their policy first, then file a UIM claim against your own policy for the difference.
The UIM Process â Step by Step
Confirm the at-fault driver's policy limits (demand disclosure from their insurer)
Notify YOUR insurer in writing that you are making a UIM claim â do this early, before any settlement
Get written consent from your UIM insurer before accepting the at-fault driver's policy limit settlement
Your UIM insurer may want to step in and take over the litigation against the at-fault driver
If they don't object, accept the at-fault policy limits and then pursue your own UIM coverage
UIM pays the difference between what you received and your actual damages, up to your UIM policy limit
Total Loss & Property Damage
Property damage is handled separately from your injury claim. Don't let them link the two.
What "total loss" means
The insurer declares your car a total loss when repair costs exceed a percentage of the car's pre-accident market value (varies by state â typically 70â80%). They then offer you the "actual cash value" (ACV) of your car â which is often low.
How they calculate ACV â and how to fight it
They use computer programs like CCC One or Mitchell. These systems often undervalue your vehicle. You have the right to dispute the valuation. Pull comparable listings in your area (same year, make, model, mileage, condition) from Autotrader, CarGurus, and Carmax. Submit these as comparables.
Gap insurance
If you're financing or leasing your car and it's totaled, you may owe more on the loan than the car is worth. Gap insurance covers this difference. Check if you have it â many auto loans include it.
Rental car coverage
If the at-fault driver's insurer accepts liability, they should provide a rental car while yours is being repaired or until you receive your settlement. If they're dragging their feet, your own collision coverage (if you have it) can also provide rental coverage.
Never sign a property damage release that releases your injury claim
Read every document carefully. A property damage release should say it's limited to property damage only. If it says "full and final release" or releases "all claims" â don't sign it without having an attorney review it first.
The Delay Game â Why They Stall
Delay is a deliberate strategy. The longer a claim drags on, the more likely you are to accept a low offer out of financial desperation, the more witnesses forget, and the closer you get to the statute of limitations.
""We're still investigating liability.""
Reality: Can last months. They may be waiting for you to say something inconsistent, looking for dirt, or simply hoping you give up.
""We need more medical records.""
Reality: They request records they already have, request them from providers who weren't involved, or request records from years ago to find pre-existing conditions.
""Your file is being reviewed by a supervisor.""
Reality: A stall tactic. Nothing requires supervisor review for routine communications.
""We sent you a letter â did you not receive it?""
Reality: Letters get "lost," emails bounce, calls aren't returned. Everything in writing, everything time-stamped.
""We're waiting on the police report.""
Reality: Police reports are typically available within 5â10 days. Waiting months "for the report" is not legitimate.
The statute of limitations is real.
In most states, you have 2 years from the date of the accident to file a lawsuit. If you miss this deadline, you lose your right to recover â forever. Insurance companies know this. Delay long enough and your claim expires. Check your deadline â
Red Flags â When to Get an Attorney Immediately
What To Do Instead â The Countermove for Every Trap
â Limit communication with their adjuster
You are only required to cooperate with YOUR OWN insurer (for PIP/UM claims). For the at-fault driver's insurer â you can decline to discuss your injuries, decline a recorded statement, and decline to answer questions about fault.
â Put everything in writing
After any phone call, send an email: "Per our call on [date], [summary]." This creates a record and prevents them from mischaracterizing conversations.
â Don't rush treatment or accept early settlement
Wait until your doctor says you've reached Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI) â the point where your condition has stabilized â before settling. Before MMI, you don't know your full damages.
â Demand all releases in limited form
Any release you sign should be limited to specific claims only. Cross out "all claims" language. If they won't accept a limited release, that's a signal to get an attorney.
â Track everything with dates and names
Every call: date, time, adjuster name, what was said. Every letter: date received, what it said. This documentation protects you if the claim becomes a bad faith case.
â Consult an attorney â even if you think you don't need one
Most PI attorneys offer free consultations. Even a single conversation gives you a professional assessment of what your case is worth and whether you're being played. They only get paid if you win.
Know the rules before they play you.
Use our free tools to evaluate your offer, estimate your settlement, and build your case file â then decide if you want an attorney with all the facts in hand.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by state. Consult a licensed personal injury attorney in your state for advice specific to your situation.