9 Insurance Adjuster Tactics That Cut Your Settlement (And How to Counter Each)
Adjusters aren’t evil — they’re measured on “loss ratio” (claims paid ÷ premiums collected). Their job is to close your file for the lowest defensible number. Yours is to know the playbook so you don’t hand them ammunition.
Tactic 1: The Friendly Recorded Statement
What it looks like: “We just need to record a quick statement so we can process your claim faster.”
What’s really happening: any inconsistency between this statement and later medical records becomes impeachment material.
Counter: “I’m happy to provide a written statement after I’ve consulted with counsel. Please send your questions in writing.”
Tactic 2: The Quick Lowball
What it looks like: a settlement offer within 1-2 weeks, often before you’ve completed treatment.
Why it works: if you’re paying medical bills out of pocket, even an inadequate check feels like relief.
Counter: never accept until MMI. Reply: “Thank you for the offer. I’ll respond once treatment is complete and damages are fully documented.”
Tactic 3: “Sign This Medical Authorization”
What it looks like: a broad HIPAA release covering all your records, all providers, all dates.
What’s really happening: the insurer mines for pre-existing conditions to argue your injury isn’t accident-related.
Counter: only sign limited authorizations covering: (1) accident-related providers, (2) dates from injury forward.
Tactic 4: Delaying Until Statute of Limitations
What it looks like: stalled responses, “still under review,” requests for more documents already provided.
Counter: calendar your SOL date. At 6 months out, send a 30-day demand for a final offer or you’ll file suit. Then file.
Tactic 5: “Your Injuries Are Pre-Existing”
What it looks like: they pull your medical history showing prior back pain or treatment.
Counter: the legal standard is the Eggshell Plaintiff Rule — the defendant takes you as they find you. Aggravation of a pre-existing condition is fully compensable. Get a treating physician to write a causation letter explicitly stating the accident worsened the prior condition.
Tactic 6: “Gap in Treatment Means You’re Fine”
What it looks like: they highlight any 30+ day gap in your records as proof your injury resolved.
Counter: avoid gaps. If you must miss treatment (work, money, child care), document why in your pain journal so you can rebut later.
Tactic 7: The “Fair Market Value” Anchor
What it looks like: they cite a database showing “average settlement for whiplash is $X” and offer that.
Counter: their database (Colossus / Mitchell) is calibrated to underpay. Counter with state jury verdict reports for similar cases — Westlaw or your state bar publish these.
Tactic 8: “We Need a Final Demand From You First”
What it looks like: they refuse to make an opening offer.
Counter: always let them open. If pushed, give a high-anchor demand 2-3× your target — never your bottom line.
Tactic 9: The “Take It or We Litigate” Ultimatum
What it looks like: after 1-2 rounds, they declare their offer “final” and threaten litigation.
Counter: 80% of “final” offers move when you call the bluff. Reply: “If your authority is exhausted at the supervisor level, please escalate to the manager.” Most adjusters have $5K-$25K above their stated max.
The Meta-Pattern
Every tactic above exploits one of three things: your fear (of bills, conflict, or delay), your trust (sounds friendly, must be fair), or your ignorance (you don’t know what’s normal). Knowing the pattern is half the defense.