Kansas diminished value law
Kansas appellate courts have allowed 1st-party DV under standard auto policy language.
Citing authority: Kan. Stat. § 60-513
Statute of limitations: 2 years. Filing late waives the claim — carriers will not extend.
The Kansas total-loss threshold (75% of ACV) interacts with DV: vehicles repaired just below threshold typically suffer the largest diminished value, because their structural histories show on Carfax but they were not retired.
How to file in Kansas
- 1Document the pre-loss condition: photos, service records, comparable listings.
- 2Wait for repairs to complete and obtain the final repair invoice.
- 3Get an independent DV appraisal (USPAP-compliant, market-data based, citing Kansas comp sets).
- 4Send a written demand to the at-fault carrier citing Kan. Stat. § 60-513 within 2 years.
- 5If denied or undervalued, escalate to the state DOI or invoke the appraisal clause.
17c Diminished Value Calculator
The 17c formula is the industry-standard starting point used by State Farm, GEICO, and most adjusters. Real recoveries are usually higher — this gives you the insurer's anchor.
Kansas DV claims by insurer
Each carrier handles DV differently. Pick yours for negotiation tactics specific to their valuation tool.
Frequently asked
Can I file a diminished value claim in Kansas?
Yes. Kansas appellate courts have allowed 1st-party DV under standard auto policy language. The statute of limitations is 2 years.
How much is a Kansas diminished value claim worth?
Kansas drivers typically recover $1,500–$4,100 on standard passenger vehicles. Luxury and low-mileage vehicles often exceed that range. Severity, mileage, vehicle class, and pre-loss comp values all drive the number.
What is the statute of limitations for diminished value in Kansas?
2 years. Citing authority: Kan. Stat. § 60-513. File before the window closes — insurers will not waive it.
Will the insurer accept my Kansas DV claim?
Carriers routinely deny or undervalue first-offer DV claims. An independent USPAP appraisal, paired with a written demand citing Kan. Stat. § 60-513, materially changes that response.