📍 50-State DV Law Guide

Diminished Value Rights — State by State.

Diminished value law varies significantly across the United States. Some states allow recovery from your own insurer; most allow only third-party claims. Statutes of limitations range from 2 to 6 years. The strongest states have explicit case law; weaker states leave claimants with no statutory hook at all. This guide covers what diminished value rights actually look like in each state.

Where Your Accident Happened Determines Your Recovery Path.

Diminished value is a state-law claim. The rules that govern recovery — whether first-party recovery is allowed, what statute of limitations applies, what bad-faith remedies exist, what small claims court limits are — are entirely a function of the state where the accident occurred. A claim that's a slam-dunk in Georgia may not be recoverable in Michigan. The same vehicle, same damage, same insurer, different result.

All 50 states + DC are now live — a complete 51-jurisdiction database covering every U.S. diminished value framework. From Georgia's plaintiff-friendly first- and third-party recovery to North Dakota's statutory limit on DV recovery, from California's pure comparative negligence to DC's pure contributory negligence, every jurisdiction has its own controlling case law, statute of limitations, comparative-fault rule, and small claims procedure documented in this database. Each guide contains full case law analysis, filing procedures, and demand letter strategy specific to that state's appellate authority.

The four-bucket framework
Every state falls into one of four diminished value categories:
  1. First and Third-Party — both first-party (your own insurer) and third-party recovery allowed. Georgia is the only state in this category.
  2. Third-Party Only — recovery allowed only from at-fault driver's insurer. Most states.
  3. Limited Third-Party — recovery technically allowed but with significant practical barriers. A handful of states.
  4. Effectively Barred — case law or policy language makes recovery extremely difficult. Few states.

State Comparison — Live Guides.

Quick reference for all 51 live state guides — every U.S. jurisdiction. Each row links to the full guide with case-by-case analysis, filing procedures, and state-specific demand letter strategy.

StateRecovery TypeStatute of LimitationsSmall Claims LimitLeading Authority
AlabamaThird-Party Only2 years (§ 6-2-38)$6,000 + Pure ContributoryJoiner v. Holland & Woodard; Pritchett blocks first-party
AlaskaThird-Party (Evolving)2 years (AS 09.10.070)$10,000 (Pure Comparative)Willett v. State of Alaska (1992); Restatement § 928 acknowledged
ArizonaThird-Party Only2 years (A.R.S. § 12-542)$3,500Oliver v. Henry, 227 Ariz. 514 (Ct. App. 2011)
ArkansasThird-Party + UMPD (Hit-and-Run)3 years (§ 16-56-105)$5,000MFA Insurance Co. v. Citizens Nat. Bank (Ark. 1977)
CaliforniaThird-Party Only3 years (CCP § 338(c))$12,500CACI 3903J (2016); Baldwin v. AAA
ColoradoThird-Party Only3 years (C.R.S. § 13-80-101)$7,500Larson v. Long, 74 Colo. 152 (1923); Trujillo v. Wilson (1948)
ConnecticutThird-Party Only2 years (§ 52-584)$5,000 (no appeal)Littlejohn v. Elionsky (1944); Harding v. Spulick (2024)
DelawareThird-Party Only2 years (10 Del. C. § 8107)$25,000Delledonne (Del. Sup.) blocks first-party; tort recovery available
District of ColumbiaThird-Party Only3 years (DC Code § 12-301)$10,000 + Pure ContributoryStandard property damage tort framework; pure contributory bar
FloridaThird-Party Only4 years (§ 95.11(3))$8,000McHale; Fla. Stat. § 626.9743
GeorgiaFirst & Third-Party4 years (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-32)$15,000State Farm v. Mabry, 274 Ga. 498 (2001)
HawaiiThird-Party (Evolving)2 years (HRS § 657-7)$5,000County of Kauai v. Pacific Standard Life (Haw. 1982) — real property DV recognized
IdahoThird-Party (Evolving)3 years (Idaho Code § 5-218)$5,000 (no attorneys)Boel v. Stewart Title (Idaho 2002) — real property DV recognized
IllinoisThird-Party + UMPD5 years (735 ILCS 5/13-205)$10,000Trailmobile v. Higgs, 12 Ill. App. 3d 323 (1973)
IndianaThird-Party + UMPD2 years (§ 34-11-2-4)$10,000Wiese-GMC v. Wells (1993); Allgood v. Meridian (2005)
IowaThird-Party Only5 years (Iowa Code § 614.1)$6,500Long v. McAllister (1982); Hawkeye Motors (1995); Papenheim (1995)
KansasThird-Party Only2 years (K.S.A. § 60-513)$4,000Broadie v. Randall, 113 Kan. 357 (1923)
KentuckyThird-Party Only2 years (KRS 304.39-230)$2,500Muncie v. Wiesemann (Ky. 2018) — stigma damages doctrine
LouisianaThird-Party + UMPD2 years* (Act 423, 2024)$5,000Orillac v. Solomon (2000); LA R.S. 9:2800.17 (explicit DV statute)
MaineThird-Party Only6 years (14 M.R.S.A. § 752)$6,000Collins v. Kelley (Me. 1935) — 90 years of authority
Maryland3rd-Party + Mandatory UMPD3 years (§ 5-101)$5,000Fred Frederick Motors (1971); MIA Bulletin 24-8 (2024)
MassachusettsThird-Party (Policy Specific)3 years (Ch. 260, § 2A)$7,000McGilloway (2021); Cubberley (2025)
MichiganMini-Tort ($3K cap)3 years (MCL 600.5805)Sm. Claims Div.MCL 500.3135(3)(e); No-fault statute
MinnesotaThird-Party Only6 years (Minn. Stat. § 541.05)$15,000O'Connor v. Schwartz (1975); Restatement § 928; Rinkel (1959)
MississippiThird-Party + UMPD3 years (§ 15-1-49)$3,500 (Pure Comparative)Both-elements common law; Miss. Code § 11-7-15
MissouriThird-Party Only5 years (§ 516.120)$5,000Rook v. John F. Oliver Trucking (1977)
MontanaThird-Party (Evolving)2 years (§ 27-2-207)$7,000Hop v. Safeco (Mont. 2011) — DV is "open question"
NebraskaThird-Party (Uncertain)4 years (§ 25-207)$3,900 (no attorneys)No reported authority either way; Restatement § 928 framework
NevadaThird-Party Only3 years (NRS § 11.190(3)(c))$10,000Dugan v. Gotsopoulos (Nev. 2001); NV Jury Instruction 10.09
New HampshireThird-Party (Evolving)3 years (RSA 508:4)$10,000 + No Mandatory InsuranceNo reported authority; only U.S. state without mandatory auto insurance
New JerseyThird-Party + UMPD6 years (N.J.S.A. § 2A:14-1)$20,000 (SCP)Jones v. Lahn (1949); Fanfarillo (1980); Panter (2019)
New MexicoThird-Party + UMPD (Hit-and-Run)4 years (§ 37-1-4)$10,000 (Pure Comparative)Hubbard v. Albuquerque Truck Center (N.M. 1998) — stigma damages
New YorkThird-Party Only3 years (CPLR § 214(4))$10,000 NYC / $5,000 elsewhereFranklin Corp v. Prahler, 932 N.Y.S.2d 610 (4th Dep't 2011)
North CarolinaThird-Party Only3 years (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52)$10,000N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-279.21 (third-party appraisal clause)
North Dakota⚠️ NOT Recoverable6 years (§ 28-01-16)$15,000 (FINAL — no appeal)§ 32-03-09.1 + Sullivan v. Pulkrabek limit recovery to lesser of repair cost or DV
OhioThird-Party + UMPD2 years (ORC § 2305.10)$6,000Falter v. Toledo (1959); Rakich v. Anthem (2007); Hyden (2024)
OklahomaThird-Party Only2 years (12 O.S. § 95)$10,000Brennen v. Aston (2003); OUJI 4.14; 23 O.S. § 61
Oregon1st + 3rd-Party + UMPD6 years (ORS 12.080)$10,000 + ORS 20.080Rossier (1930); Gonzales v. Farmers; ORS 20.080 fee-shifting
PennsylvaniaThird-Party Only2 years (42 Pa.C.S.A. § 5524)$12,000Holt v. Pariser (1947); Restatement § 928; 42 P.S. § 8371
Rhode IslandThird-Party + UMPD (Hit-and-Run)10 YEARS (§ 9-1-13)$2,500 (no plaintiff appeal)LONGEST SOL in country; mandatory $25K UMPD covers DV
South Carolina3rd-Party + Mandatory UMPD3 years (§ 15-3-530)$7,500 + ArbitrationNewman v. Brown (1955); SC Property Damage Arbitration ($10 fee)
South DakotaThird-Party (Evolving)6 years (§ 15-2-13)$12,000 (Slight/Gross)Culhane (S.D. 2005) blocks first-party; tort framework supports third-party
TennesseeLimited Third-Party3 years (T.C.A. § 28-3-105)$25,000GEICO v. Bloodworth (2007); Grimes v. Hancock (2012)
TexasThird-Party Only2 years (Tex. CPRC § 16.003)$20,000Parkway Co. v. Woodruff, 901 S.W.2d 434 (Tex. 1995)
UtahThird-Party + UMPD3 years (§ 78B-2-307)$11,000Metcalf v. Mellen (Utah 1920) — 105 years; Utah Code § 78B-5-818
VermontThird-Party + UMPD3 years (12 V.S.A. § 512)$5,000 (50% bar)Standard tort framework; VT UMPD covers DV (unusual for evolving state)
VirginiaThird-Party Only5 years (Va. Code § 8.01-243)$5,000Averett v. Shircliff, 218 Va. 202 (1977); Va. Code § 46.2-1600
WashingtonFirst & Third-Party3 years (RCW 4.16.080)$10,000Moeller v. Farmers, 173 Wn.2d 264 (2011); Grothe v. Kushnivich (2022)
West VirginiaThird-Party + Mandatory UMPD2 years (§ 55-2-12)$10,000 + Structural Damage RequiredEllis v. King (W. Va. 1990) — narrow construction; mandatory $25K UMPD covers DV
WisconsinThird-Party Only6 years (Wis. Stat. § 893.52)$10,000Hellenbrand v. Hilliard (2004); Hawes (1981); Wildin (2001)
WyomingThird-Party (Evolving)4 years (§ 1-3-105)$7,000 (51% bar)Miller v. Campbell County (Wyo. 1995) — DV recognized in inverse condemnation

Small claims limits and statutes of limitations are state-specific. SOL begins running on the date of the accident in most jurisdictions. Verify your state's procedural rules before filing.

State-by-State Diminished Value Guides.

Tap any state below to access its complete diminished value law guide. Live guides include full case law analysis, filing procedures, and state-specific demand letter strategy.

Alabama
Third-Party Only
Trial-court DV recovery (Joiner v. Holland & Woodard). Pritchett v. State Farm (2002) blocks first-party. PURE CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE — document liability rigorously.
View Guide →
Alaska
Evolving
Willett v. State of Alaska (1992) — criminal mischief case acknowledging Restatement § 928. Pure comparative under AS 09.17.060. 2-year SOL. No reported vehicle DV authority yet.
View Guide →
Arizona
Third-Party Only
Oliver v. Henry (Ct. App. 2011) — no sale required to prove DV. Farmers v. R.B.L. Investment (1983). 2-year SOL. Pure comparative negligence.
View Guide →
Arkansas
Third-Party + UMPD
MFA Insurance Co. v. Citizens Nat. Bank (Ark. 1977). UMPD covers DV INCLUDING hit-and-run scenarios — unusual feature. Modified comparative with strict 50% bar.
View Guide →
California
Third-Party Only
Baldwin v. AAA bars first-party. CACI 3903J (2016) anchors third-party. Largest U.S. auto market. 3-year SOL.
View Guide →
Colorado
Third-Party Only
Larson v. Long (1923) + Trujillo v. Wilson (1948). Pattern Civil Jury Instructions codify DV. 3-year SOL. Modified comparative (50% bar).
View Guide →
Connecticut
Third-Party Only
Littlejohn v. Elionsky (1944) — 80 years of authority. Harding v. Spulick (2024) is recent application. 2-year SOL. CT small claims has no-appeal rule.
View Guide →
Delaware
Third-Party Only
Delledonne (Del. Sup. Ct.) blocks first-party DV ("repair and replace" not ambiguous). Third-party tort recovery available. $25K Justice of the Peace Court — among highest small claims caps in country.
View Guide →
District of Columbia
Third-Party Only
Standard property damage tort framework. PURE CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE — recovery barred at 1% fault. One of only four U.S. jurisdictions retaining this rule. 3-year SOL.
View Guide →
Florida
Third-Party Only
McHale and Siegle precedent. § 626.9743 statutory hook. 4-year SOL. $8,000 small claims limit.
View Guide →
Georgia
First & Third-Party
Mabry v. State Farm precedent. Strongest DV state. 4-year SOL. Bad-faith penalties under O.C.G.A. § 33-4-6.
View Guide →
Hawaii
Evolving
County of Kauai v. Pacific Standard Life (Haw. 1982) recognizes diminution-in-value in real property condemnation. No reported vehicle DV authority yet. High vehicle costs and unique import market.
View Guide →
Idaho
Evolving
Boel v. Stewart Title Guaranty Co. (Idaho 2002) recognizes diminution-in-value in real property. No reported vehicle DV authority yet. 3-year SOL. Modified comparative with 50% bar. Small claims attorneys prohibited.
View Guide →
Illinois
Third-Party + UMPD
Trailmobile v. Higgs (1973) both-elements framework. 5-year SOL (longest tier). UMPD covers DV. State Farm's home state.
View Guide →
Indiana
Third-Party + UMPD
Wiese-GMC v. Wells (1993) three-method framework. Allgood (2005) bars first-party. 2-year SOL. UMPD may cover DV.
View Guide →
Iowa
Third-Party Only
Long v. McAllister (1982) + Hawkeye Motors (1995) + Papenheim (1995) three-standard framework. DV recovery under Standard 3. 5-year SOL.
View Guide →
Kansas
Third-Party Only
Broadie v. Randall (1923) — 100 years of DV case law. K.S.A. § 60-513. 2-year SOL. $4,000 small claims. KID complaint process.
View Guide →
Kentucky
Third-Party Only
Muncie v. Wiesemann (Ky. 2018) Supreme Court — stigma damages doctrine. Pure comparative under KRS 411.182. KRS 304.20-040 prohibits premium hikes for not-at-fault claims.
View Guide →
Louisiana
Third-Party + UMPD
LA R.S. 9:2800.17 explicit DV statute. Orillac v. Solomon (2000). NEW: Act 423 (2024) extended SOL to 2 years for post-July 2024 accidents.
View Guide →
Maine
Third-Party Only
Collins v. Kelley, 133 Me. 410 (Me. 1935) — 90+ years of Maine Supreme Judicial Court authority. 6-year SOL — among the longest. Modified comparative with 50% bar.
View Guide →
Maryland
3rd-Party + Mandatory UMPD
Fred Frederick Motors (1971). 2020 amendment to § 19-509(c) + MIA Bulletin 24-8 (2024) mandate UMPD covers DV. Pure contributory.
View Guide →
Massachusetts
Third-Party (Policy-Specific)
McGilloway (2021) covers 2008 policies. Cubberley (Jan 2025) excludes 2016 policies. Recovery path depends on policy edition.
View Guide →
Michigan
Mini-Tort ($3K cap)
No-fault state. MCL 500.3135(3)(e) mini-tort cap raised to $3,000 (July 2020). Small claims division of district court required.
View Guide →
Minnesota
Third-Party Only
O'Connor v. Schwartz (1975) explicitly adopts Restatement § 928. 75 years of authority. 6-year SOL. Pure comparative negligence. $15K conciliation court.
View Guide →
Mississippi
Third-Party + UMPD
Both-elements common-law framework: cost of repairs PLUS residual market-value diminution. Pure comparative under Miss. Code § 11-7-15 — uniquely forgiving.
View Guide →
Missouri
Third-Party Only
Rook v. John F. Oliver Trucking (1977). 5-year SOL. Pure comparative negligence (most forgiving fault rule).
View Guide →
Montana
Evolving
Hop v. Safeco (Mont. 2011) — Montana Supreme Court explicitly notes DV is "open question." Pursue with awareness that you may be establishing precedent. 2-year SOL.
View Guide →
Nebraska
Uncertain
Unique among U.S. states — NO reported authority either for or against DV recovery. Restatement § 928 provides framework. 4-year SOL. $3,900 small claims (attorneys prohibited).
View Guide →
Nevada
Third-Party Only
Dugan v. Gotsopoulos (Nev. 2001) Supreme Court. Nevada Jury Instruction 10.09 explicitly recognizes DV. NRS § 51.245 makes valuation guides admissible by statute.
View Guide →
New Hampshire
Evolving
No reported NH authority either way for vehicle DV. Standard tort framework. NH is the only U.S. state without mandatory auto insurance — verify at-fault driver coverage. 3-year SOL. Modified comparative 51% bar.
View Guide →
New Jersey
Third-Party + UMPD
Jones v. Lahn + Fanfarillo + Panter — 75 years of authority. 6-year SOL (longest in this guide). Special Civil Part to $20K.
View Guide →
New Mexico
Third-Party + UMPD
Hubbard v. Albuquerque Truck Center (N.M. 1998) — stigma damages framework. NM UMPD covers DV including hit-and-run. 4-year SOL — among the longer windows. Pure comparative under Scott v. Rizzo.
View Guide →
New York
Third-Party Only
Franklin Corp v. Prahler. Allstate's March 2022 NY DV acknowledgment. Pure comparative negligence. 3-year SOL.
View Guide →
North Carolina
Third-Party Only
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-279.21 third-party appraisal clause (unique). 11 NCAC 04 .0421(5). 25% damage disclosure laws. Pure contributory negligence.
View Guide →
North Dakota
NOT Recoverable
⚠️ NOT a DV recovery state. § 32-03-09.1 + Sullivan v. Pulkrabek (N.D. 2000) limit recovery to lesser of repair cost OR diminution. Once you choose one, you've received full measure. 6-year SOL. $15K small claims (NOT appealable).
View Guide →
Ohio
Third-Party + UMPD
Falter v. Toledo (1959) + Rakich v. Anthem (2007) both-elements framework. UMPD uniquely covers DV. 2-year SOL.
View Guide →
Oklahoma
Third-Party Only
Brennen v. Aston (2003) Sup. Ct. authority. OUJI 4.14 pattern jury instruction. 23 O.S. § 61. Attorney fees recoverable. Well-codified framework.
View Guide →
Oregon
1st + 3rd-Party + UMPD
Rossier (1930) is foundational. Gonzales v. Farmers allows first-party. ORS 20.080 fee-shifting on under-$10K claims is the strongest in any state.
View Guide →
Pennsylvania
Third-Party Only
Holt v. Pariser (1947) + Restatement § 928. 2-year SOL. 42 P.S. § 8371 bad-faith statute (treble damages). $12,000 small claims.
View Guide →
Rhode Island
Third-Party + UMPD (Hit-and-Run)
LONGEST SOL IN COUNTRY (10 years under R.I. Gen. Laws § 9-1-13). Mandatory $25K UMPD covers DV including hit-and-run. $2,500 small claims (lowest in country).
View Guide →
South Carolina
3rd-Party + Mandatory UMPD
Newman v. Brown (1955) both-elements. $25K mandatory UMPD covers DV (incl. hit-and-run). SC Property Damage Arbitration ($10 filing fee).
View Guide →
South Dakota
Evolving
Culhane v. Western Nat'l Mut. Ins. Co. (S.D. 2005) blocks first-party. No reported third-party authority. Standard tort framework supports third-party. 6-year SOL. Unique slight/gross comparative under SDCL § 20-9-2.
View Guide →
Tennessee
Limited Third-Party
GEICO v. Bloodworth (2007) framework. Grimes v. Hancock (2012) either-or limitation. $25K small claims (highest cap).
View Guide →
Texas
Third-Party Only
Parkway and TDI Bulletin B-0027-00. New HB 1659 mandatory appraisal clause effective 2026. 2-year SOL.
View Guide →
Utah
Third-Party + UMPD
Metcalf v. Mellen (Utah 1920) — 105+ years of supreme court authority, predating most other states' DV decisions. Utah Code § 78B-5-818 codifies. Optional UMPD ($3,500/$250 deductible).
View Guide →
Vermont
Third-Party + UMPD
No reported VT authority for vehicle DV. Standard tort framework. Vermont UMPD covers DV — unusual for an evolving DV state. 3-year SOL. Modified comparative with 50% bar (slightly stricter than 51% bar states).
View Guide →
Virginia
Third-Party Only
Averett v. Shircliff (1977) + Va. Code § 46.2-1600 statutory definition. 5-year SOL (longest). UMPD covers DV. Pure contributory negligence.
View Guide →
Washington
First & Third-Party
Moeller v. Farmers (first-party) + Grothe v. Kushnivich (third-party). Insurance Fair Conduct Act treble damages. 3-year SOL.
View Guide →
West Virginia
Third-Party + Mandatory UMPD
Ellis v. King (W. Va. 1990) — narrowly construed; requires structural damage to vehicle of significant value. Mandatory $25K UMPD covers DV (with physical-contact requirement for hit-and-run). 2-year SOL.
View Guide →
Wisconsin
Third-Party Only
Hellenbrand v. Hilliard (2004) rejected the "lower of the two" rule. Both repair cost AND post-repair diminution recoverable. 6-year SOL.
View Guide →
Wyoming
Evolving
Miller v. Campbell County (Wyo. 1995) — DV recognized in inverse condemnation. No reported vehicle DV authority yet. Standard tort framework. 4-year SOL — among the longer windows. Modified comparative 51% bar.
View Guide →
✓ Complete Coverage
All 51 Live
All 50 states + DC are now covered. Every U.S. diminished value framework documented with controlling case law, statute of limitations, comparative-fault rule, and small claims procedure. The most comprehensive DV state database online.

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