Vermont Diminished Value Claim Guide

Vermont drivers can pursue diminished-value claims against the at-fault driver's insurer when their repaired vehicle has lost market value. Statute of limitations: 3 years. Typical recovery: $1,200–$3,400.

DV stance
third-party
Statute of limitations
3 years
Typical recovery
$1,200–$3,400
First-party recognized
No

Vermont diminished value law

Vermont drivers can pursue diminished-value claims against the at-fault driver's insurer when their repaired vehicle has lost market value.

Citing authority: 12 V.S.A. § 512

Statute of limitations: 3 years. Filing late waives the claim — carriers will not extend.

The Vermont total-loss threshold (Total Loss Formula) 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 Vermont

  1. 1Document the pre-loss condition: photos, service records, comparable listings.
  2. 2Wait for repairs to complete and obtain the final repair invoice.
  3. 3Get an independent DV appraisal (USPAP-compliant, market-data based, citing Vermont comp sets).
  4. 4Send a written demand to the at-fault carrier citing 12 V.S.A. § 512 within 3 years.
  5. 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.

17c estimated diminished value
$660
$2,200
10% cap
×0.50
Damage
×0.6
Mileage

17c is the insurer's floor, not the ceiling. Our independent DV appraisals routinely recover 1.5–3× the 17c number using market-data comp sets.

Vermont 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 Vermont?

Yes. Vermont drivers can pursue diminished-value claims against the at-fault driver's insurer when their repaired vehicle has lost market value. The statute of limitations is 3 years.

How much is a Vermont diminished value claim worth?

Vermont drivers typically recover $1,200–$3,400 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 Vermont?

3 years. Citing authority: 12 V.S.A. § 512. File before the window closes — insurers will not waive it.

Will the insurer accept my Vermont DV claim?

Carriers routinely deny or undervalue first-offer DV claims. An independent USPAP appraisal, paired with a written demand citing 12 V.S.A. § 512, materially changes that response.

Get a Vermont DV appraisal that wins

USPAP-compliant, market-data based, cites your VIN's comp set. Average client recovery is 1.5–3× the carrier's 17c offer.