How GEICO undervalues claims
Valuation engine: CCC ONE Market Valuation
- GEICO almost always opens with a CCC ONE valuation that pulls comps from a 75–150 mile radius — often dragging in non-comparable trims.
- GEICO's first offer typically applies a 'condition adjustment' of -$500 to -$1,500 with no in-person inspection.
- GEICO valuations frequently miss factory-option packages, lowering ACV by $800–$2,000 on equipped vehicles.
- Mileage corrections alone reverse roughly 1 in 3 GEICO disputes we handle.
Vermont laws on your side
Appraisal clause
Vermont auto policies include the binding appraisal clause.
Sales tax & title fees
Insurers must include the 6% Purchase and Use Tax and title fees in the settlement.
Diminished value
DV claim availability depends on policy form and case law.
Statute reference
21-020-002 Vt. Code R. §10 (Unfair Claim Practices).
How GEICO calculates ACV in Vermont
In Vermont, GEICO runs every total-loss valuation through CCC ONE Market Valuation. The system pulls roughly 9 "comparable" listings within a 65-mile radius of your ZIP code, then applies a base value before stacking deductions. For Vermont claims, GEICO adjusters tend to subtract $800–$1,500 as a "condition adjustment" based on photos rather than an in-person inspection, and they almost always omit factory option packages (navigation, premium audio, tow package, advanced safety) that boost ACV in the Vermont private-party market. Insurers must include the 6% Purchase and Use Tax and title fees in the settlement, but GEICO's first offer in Vermont frequently leaves that line item blank until you push back. The comp radius, the condition deduction, and the option-package omission are the three places where Vermont drivers consistently recover thousands once an independent appraiser re-runs the numbers.
Vermont case study: +$3,600 on a 2018 Tesla Model 3
A metro Vermont client came to us after GEICO offered $12,250 on a 2018 Tesla Model 3 totaled in a rear-end collision. The CCC ONE Market Valuation report pulled comps from outside the local market and missed two factory option packages. We rebuilt the valuation using Vermont-specific dealer asking prices, corrected the mileage adjustment, and added the omitted options. GEICO revised the offer to $15,850 — a $3,600 increase — within 19 days, without invoking the appraisal clause. Representative example; outcomes vary by VIN, condition, and policy language in Vermont.
Case details have been generalized to protect client privacy.