New York Insurance Claim Deadlines
15 days
To acknowledge your claim
30 days
To complete investigation
35 days
To issue payment
Under New York Insurance Law § 2601 (Unfair Claims Settlement Practices) and 11 NYCRR Part 216, your insurer must follow these deadlines. The New York Department of Financial Services enforces these requirements. New York has robust consumer protections but no first-party bad faith statute; remedies under Insurance Law § 3420.
Common Auto Accident Claim Issues
- Total loss valuation is based on lowball comparable vehicles that don't match your car's actual condition, mileage, or options
- Repair estimate uses aftermarket or salvage parts instead of OEM parts, reducing quality and resale value
- Diminished value — the permanent reduction in your car's market value after an accident — is ignored entirely
- Rental car coverage is cut off before repairs are complete or a replacement vehicle is purchased
- Labor rates in the insurer's estimate are below what local body shops actually charge
- Supplemental damage discovered during repairs is disputed or delayed, leaving your car sitting in the shop
Why New York Auto Accident Claims Are Underpaid
- Total loss valuations use proprietary databases (like CCC or Mitchell) that consistently undervalue vehicles
- Insurers push aftermarket and salvage parts that cost less but may not fit or perform like OEM parts
- Diminished value is a real economic loss that most insurers won't pay unless you specifically demand it
- Labor rate disputes between insurers and body shops are passed on to the policyholder as out-of-pocket costs
- Rental car coverage caps are often hit before repairs are complete, especially with supply chain delays on parts
- Insurers count on people not knowing their state allows them to choose their own repair shop and demand OEM parts
What Your New York Dispute Letter Should Include
- Citation of New York Insurance Law § 2601 (Unfair Claims Settlement Practices) and 11 NYCRR Part 216 by name, putting your insurer on legal notice
- CC to the New York Department of Financial Services at One State Street, New York, NY 10004
- An independent appraisal or comparable vehicle analysis showing the true market value of your vehicle
- Estimates from your chosen body shop using OEM parts and current local labor rates
- A diminished value claim supported by a professional diminished value appraisal or market analysis
- Your state's unfair claims settlement practices act and any OEM parts or choice-of-shop requirements
- Documentation of rental car expenses and a demand for coverage through repair completion or total loss settlement
- A line-by-line comparison of the insurer's estimate versus your shop's estimate
Insurer Tactics to Watch For
- Using proprietary valuation tools that cherry-pick low-value comparable vehicles for total loss offers
- Steering you to their 'preferred' body shop that uses cheaper parts and agrees to insurer labor rates
- Denying diminished value claims unless you specifically know to ask and provide a formal demand
- Cutting off rental car reimbursement on an arbitrary date regardless of repair status
- Refusing to pay for OEM parts even when aftermarket alternatives don't meet manufacturer specifications
- Delaying approval of supplemental damage discovered during repairs, keeping your car in the shop longer
More About New York Insurance Laws
See all of New York's insurance claim deadlines, regulator contact information, and dispute resources.
New York Insurance Laws →