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How to Counter a Lowball Settlement Offer (Scripts and Strategy)

The first counter-offer almost always feels insulting. That’s by design — adjusters anchor low to drag your final number down. The right response isn’t outrage; it’s a structured counter that signals you understand the game and won’t cave.

First, Decode What the Offer Means

Insurers calibrate first offers as a percentage of their case reserve (the amount internally earmarked). Industry studies show:

  • First offer 30-50% of demand: normal opening; expect 2-3 rounds to fair value
  • First offer 15-30% of demand: aggressive lowball; signals weak case OR strong adjuster, requires harder push
  • First offer <15% of demand: denial in disguise; consider whether litigation is needed
  • First offer 50-70% of demand: they think you’re going to court; close quickly

If you demanded $60K and got $12K (20% of demand), that’s aggressive lowball — but workable.

The Counter-Offer Framework

Step 1: Acknowledge Without Accepting

Don’t react emotionally. Send within 5-10 days (fast enough to show seriousness, slow enough to show consideration).

Opening line: “Thank you for your offer of $12,000 dated [date]. After review, this offer does not adequately reflect the documented damages, but I believe a reasonable resolution is achievable.”

Step 2: Restate Your Strongest Damages

Don’t repeat the entire demand letter. Highlight 2-3 facts the adjuster may have undervalued:

“My demand was based on $16,640 in documented special damages plus pain and suffering for 4 months of physical therapy with ongoing residual symptoms. Your offer represents 0.7× medical bills — well below industry-standard multipliers (1.5-3.5×) for this injury type per multiple settlement databases.”

Step 3: Counter Specifically

The math: you started at $60K, they came in at $12K. Standard practice is to drop 5-15% per round.

  • Round 1 demand: $60,000
  • Round 1 counter: $12,000 (their open)
  • Round 2 demand: $54,000 (10% drop signals firmness)

Closing line: “I am willing to reduce my demand to $54,000 in good-faith effort to resolve this matter. Please respond within 14 days.”

The 6 Power Phrases That Move Adjusters

  1. “Industry-standard multiplier methodology supports…” — invokes their valuation software’s own logic against them
  2. “Recent jury verdicts in [your state] for similar injuries average…” — references the trial alternative they want to avoid
  3. “My SOL deadline is [date]; I will need to file by [date-60 days] to preserve rights” — creates time pressure
  4. “If your authority is exhausted, please escalate to your supervisor” — calls the bluff on “final” offers
  5. “My medical specials alone justify $X. Your offer of $Y doesn’t cover specials.” — anchors to hard numbers, not opinion
  6. “I’m happy to provide additional documentation if any aspect of damages was unclear” — neutralizes “we need more info” stalls

What NOT to Say

  • “This is insulting” / “are you serious” (emotional, hands them control)
  • “I really need money” (signals desperation; they’ll lowball harder)
  • “My friend got more for less” (irrelevant; weakens your position)
  • “Take it or leave it” (until you mean it; bluffs get called)
  • “I’ll call my lawyer” (do it silently; verbal threats discount)

Round-by-Round Strategy

Round 2 (their move)

Expect them to come up 30-50% from initial offer. $12K → $18-20K typical.

Your reply: drop 10% from your last position. $54K → $48-50K.

Round 3 (the convergence)

Their offer should reach 50-65% of demand. $30-35K typical.

Your position: $40-45K.

Gap is now $5-15K. This is where deals close.

The Closing Move

Three closing techniques:

  • Bracket: “I can’t go below $40K, but I can do $40K to close today.”
  • Split: “If you come up to $42K, I’ll come down to $42K.”
  • Walk-away anchor: “$40K closes this; below that, we file. Please confirm by [date].”

When to Walk Away

If after 3 rounds you’re still >30% apart, the issue isn’t negotiation — it’s case theory. Filing suit becomes the right move because:

  • Discovery exposes weak insurer arguments
  • Filing puts the case before a different decision-maker (defense counsel, not adjuster)
  • Settlement values typically rise 30-50% post-filing per industry data
  • 95% of filed cases still settle before trial

Use our AI Demand Letter Generator to draft a professional counter-offer letter, then run scenarios in the calculator to know your true bottom line before you start negotiating.

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