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What Happens After You Send a Demand Letter? The 30-90 Day Playbook

You hit “send” on the demand letter. What now? Most claimants expect either fast settlement or fast denial. The reality is a structured 60-90 day dance with predictable phases. Knowing them prevents you from accepting a lowball out of frustration.

Days 1-7: Internal Routing

Your letter lands in the adjuster’s queue. They have 80-150 active claims; yours gets triaged based on policy limits, severity flags, and SOL urgency. If you sent via certified mail with a 30-day deadline, it goes higher in the stack.

Days 7-21: Investigation & Reserve Setting

The adjuster:

  • Pulls the policy and confirms coverage
  • Reviews the police report and any prior recorded statements you gave
  • Runs your medical bills through their valuation software (Colossus, Mitchell ClaimIQ)
  • Sets the case reserve — the amount the insurer earmarks. This is usually 1.5-2× their initial settlement target.

The reserve number drives everything that follows. If reserve = $30K, expect opening offers around $15-18K and final around $25-28K.

Days 21-30: First Response

Three possible outcomes:

Outcome A: Counter-offer (~70% of cases)

Typical first counter is 25-40% of demand. If you demanded $75K, expect $20-30K opening. Don’t panic — this is anchoring, not their final position.

Outcome B: Request for more info (~20%)

“We need additional records” or “we’re investigating liability.” Send what they ask for within 14 days. Note the date — this resets but doesn’t reset the SOL.

Outcome C: Denial (~10%)

Usually citing comparative fault or pre-existing conditions. Request denial in writing with specific reasons, then prepare for litigation.

Days 30-60: Negotiation Rounds 2-3

Standard cadence is offers/counters every 2-3 weeks. Each round typically moves 10-20% of the gap. Pattern:

  • Demand: $75,000
  • Counter 1: $22,000 → Your reply: $65,000
  • Counter 2: $35,000 → Your reply: $55,000
  • Counter 3: $43,000 → Your reply: $50,000
  • Final: $46,000 — you accept or walk to litigation

Days 60-90: Closing or Stalemate

If you’re within 10-15% of agreement, push to close. Common closing techniques:

  • Split the difference: “If you’ll come up to $48K, I’ll come down to $48K — we’re both off our positions.”
  • Bracket framing: “I can’t go below $46K. If you can’t reach $46K, let’s focus on filing.”
  • Authority escalation: “Please confirm your supervisor authority before we close, so we don’t need a second round.”

If You Hit a Wall

If after 90 days you’re still 25%+ apart, it’s usually because of one of three issues:

  • Liability dispute: they think you’re partially at fault. Get the police report’s liability finding into the record explicitly.
  • Causation dispute: they think your injuries pre-existed. Get a causation letter from your treating doctor.
  • Damages dispute: they think your treatment was excessive. Get the treating provider to defend medical necessity in writing.

If none of these resolves the gap, file. Filing a lawsuit usually triggers another round of negotiation — about 95% of personal injury suits settle before trial.

The Settlement Check Process

Once you sign the settlement release:

  • Days 1-21: insurer issues check, mailed or wired to your attorney trust account (or directly to you if pro se)
  • Days 21-35: attorney negotiates medical liens (hospitals usually accept 50-70% of bill)
  • Days 35-45: attorney distributes — fees taken (33-40%), liens paid, you receive net

For self-represented claimants, the timeline is shorter (no liens to negotiate) but you’re responsible for paying outstanding medical bills from gross.

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