Third-Party DV State

Florida Diminished Value Claims — The Complete Guide.

Florida law gives accident victims a clear legal right to recover diminished value from the at-fault driver's insurance company — backed by two Florida Supreme Court rulings and a four-year statute of limitations. But Florida is also a third-party-only state, which means claim strategy is fundamentally different from Georgia or other first-party states.

Recovery Type
Third Party Only
Statute of Limitations
4 Years
Small Claims Limit
$8,000
17c Formula
Not Required

Florida's Diminished Value Case Law

Florida's diminished value rights are built on two key cases — one from the Florida Supreme Court and one from the Third District Court of Appeal. Together they establish that DV is recoverable as part of standard property damage, but only against the at-fault party.

Siegle v. Progressive Consumers Insurance Co.
819 So.2d 732 (Fla. 2002)
The Florida Supreme Court held that under a standard auto insurance policy with an option-to-repair provision, the insurer's obligation to "repair" the vehicle does not include compensating the insured for inherent diminished value. The decision foreclosed first-party DV recovery under standard Florida policies — making Florida a third-party-only DV state. The ruling was based on Florida-specific contract interpretation principles and is the reason Florida differs from states like Georgia.
McHale v. Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Co.
409 So.2d 238 (Fla. 3d DCA 1982)
The Third District Court of Appeal recognized diminished value as a recoverable element of damages in third-party property damage claims. The court applied the standard tort measure of damages: the difference between the vehicle's reasonable market value before the loss and its reasonable market value after repairs. McHale remains the foundational Florida case for third-party DV recovery and is routinely cited in Florida DV demand letters.

Together, these two cases create Florida's distinctive DV landscape: strong third-party rights, no first-party recovery. If another driver damages your vehicle, you have a clear legal right to recover diminished value from their insurance company. If you damage your own vehicle, your own insurer is generally not on the hook for DV.

The UMPD Exception
Florida does offer Uninsured Motorist Property Damage (UMPD) coverage as an optional add-on. If you carry UMPD and you're hit by an uninsured or underinsured driver, your UMPD coverage can sometimes pay for diminished value — functionally substituting for the missing third-party claim. UMPD is not standard in most Florida policies, so check your declarations page.

Statutory Backing: Fla. Stat. § 626.9743

Florida's claims handling requirements for motor vehicle insurance are codified in Florida Statute § 626.9743, which governs how insurers must adjust property damage claims. The statute requires good-faith adjustment, prompt evaluation, and fair settlement — and applies equally to first-party physical damage adjustment and third-party liability claim handling. While § 626.9743 doesn't independently create DV rights, it provides the statutory framework that supports timely resolution and good faith negotiation of DV claims.

What Makes Florida DV Claims Different

Florida is a No-Fault State (For Bodily Injury) — But Not for Property Damage

Florida's no-fault PIP system applies only to bodily injury claims. Property damage — including diminished value — follows traditional tort principles. The at-fault driver (and their insurer) is responsible for property damage caused by their negligence. This is why DV claims are pursued against the at-fault driver's insurer, not your own.

Modified Comparative Negligence

Florida applies modified comparative negligence with a 51% bar (per recent tort reform). If you are 50% or less at fault, you can recover damages reduced by your percentage of fault. If you are 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing — including DV. This makes liability determination critical: any percentage of fault assigned to you reduces your DV recovery proportionally.

Minimum Property Damage Coverage: $10,000

Florida requires drivers to carry a minimum of $10,000 in Property Damage Liability coverage. This is the policy limit available to satisfy your DV claim against an at-fault driver. If repair costs plus DV exceed the at-fault driver's policy limits, recovery beyond the limits requires either (a) UMPD coverage on your own policy, or (b) personal pursuit of the at-fault driver's assets — which is usually impractical.

Florida Hurricane and Flood Damage Considerations

Florida's hurricane exposure creates a distinct DV scenario. Vehicles damaged in named-storm flooding or wind events that are repaired (rather than totaled) often suffer significant inherent diminished value due to flood-history stigma in the resale market. Comprehensive coverage typically governs these claims, but recovery is first-party only and therefore generally excludes DV under Siegle. Owners of vehicles repaired after flood damage who later sell at a loss may have limited recourse.

Calculate Your Florida DV Claim Value

Florida courts evaluate DV under market-based principles, not formulas. This calculator gives you a starting estimate using comparable-sales methodology — the same approach Florida courts apply when DV is contested in litigation.

Florida 17c Formula Calculator
The 17c formula is not Florida law, but most insurers use a 17c-variant when evaluating Florida third-party DV claims. Run the calculation here and compare it against market reality.
17c-Variant Result
$0
What the insurer will likely offer
Market-Based DV
$0
What you're actually owed
Note: Industry-standard formula; not Florida law. McHale and § 626.9743 control.
Get a Defensible Market-Based Appraisal — $149.99

For a USPAP-compliant appraisal report admissible in Florida small claims court, county court, or settlement negotiation, order a professional MyFairClaim diminished value report.

How to File a Florida Diminished Value Claim

Step 1 — Confirm the Other Driver's Liability

Florida is a third-party state, which means the entire DV claim rests on the at-fault driver being legally responsible. Before filing, you should have:

  • The Florida Traffic Crash Report from FLHSMV (or local law enforcement)
  • Documentation that the at-fault driver was cited or accepted fault
  • Confirmation of the at-fault driver's insurance carrier and policy number
  • Their PD liability limits (your DV recovery cannot exceed available policy limits)

Step 2 — Complete Repairs Through a Quality Shop

Florida insurers may steer you to a Direct Repair Program (DRP) shop. You are not legally required to use a DRP shop — Florida law gives you the right to choose your repair facility. This matters for DV: DRP shops sometimes use aftermarket or salvage parts that affect resale value. If the at-fault insurer directed you to a DRP shop and the repair was substandard, you may have a stronger argument for repair-related diminished value in addition to inherent DV.

Step 3 — Get a Professional Appraisal

In Florida, the appraisal is the centerpiece of the claim. Because Florida courts evaluate DV under market-based comparable sales analysis (not formulas), an appraisal that documents real comparable sales of similar vehicles with and without accident history is the gold standard of evidence. The appraisal should include pre-loss market value derived from documented sources, post-repair market value with comparable evidence (typically 8-15 comparables), and USPAP-compliant certification.

Step 4 — Submit to the At-Fault Insurer

Send the appraisal and a demand letter to the at-fault driver's insurance company. Unlike Georgia, Florida does not have a strong bad-faith demand statute that creates a 60-day trigger for first-party claims, but Fla. Stat. § 624.155 provides a Civil Remedy Notice (CRN) process for bad faith claims handling that can be filed with the Florida Department of Financial Services. The CRN puts the insurer on regulatory notice and creates a 60-day cure period — failing which, a separate bad faith action becomes available.

Step 5 — Negotiate, Litigate, or File a CRN

Most claims resolve in negotiation. If the insurer refuses to settle reasonably:

  • Florida small claims court — jurisdiction up to $8,000, simplified procedure under Florida Small Claims Rule 7.010, attorney representation permitted but not required.
  • County court — for claims between $8,000 and $50,000, with standard civil procedure.
  • Florida Department of Financial Services complaint — consumer complaints to DFS can prompt regulatory inquiry.
  • Civil Remedy Notice under § 624.155 — for serious bad-faith conduct, the CRN process opens the door to bad-faith damages.

The Published Decisions That Govern Florida DV Claims

Florida diminished value rights are defined by a small set of controlling appellate decisions. Understanding what each one actually held — and didn't hold — is the single most useful piece of preparation a Florida claimant can do before negotiating with an insurer.

McHale v. Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co., 409 So.2d 238 (Fla. 3d DCA 1982)
Third-party diminished value is recoverable in Florida.
The Third District Court of Appeal held that an at-fault driver's liability insurance is responsible for the difference between the vehicle's pre-loss market value and its post-repair market value, in addition to repair costs. The court reasoned that the duty to "make whole" requires compensation for actual market value lost, not merely the mechanical cost of repair. McHale remains the foundational Florida third-party DV precedent and is cited routinely in demand letters and small claims filings.
✓ Established that proper repairs do not eliminate diminished value liability for the at-fault driver's insurer.
Siegle v. Progressive Consumers Ins. Co., 819 So.2d 732 (Fla. 2002)
First-party diminished value is generally NOT recoverable in Florida.
The Florida Supreme Court ruled that an insurer's contractual obligation under a standard Florida auto policy is to repair, replace, or pay the actual cash value of the damaged vehicle — not to compensate for residual diminished value after proper repairs. The court held that diminished value is not a covered loss under the standard first-party policy unless specifically endorsed. This is why Florida DV claims are almost always filed against the at-fault driver's insurer, not your own.
✓ Defines the boundary: Florida is a third-party DV state. Filing first-party against your own carrier without specific endorsement language will fail.
Florida Statute § 626.9743 (Comprehensive and Collision Insurance Practices)
"Like kind and quality" repair standard codified.
Florida's auto insurance statute requires that when an insurer elects to repair rather than total a vehicle, the repair must restore the vehicle to "substantially the same appearance, function, and value" as before the loss. This statutory requirement is the basis for arguing that the at-fault carrier's repair obligation extends beyond cosmetics to actual market value — even when DV is otherwise resisted. The "and value" language is decisive.
✓ Statutory hook for arguing repair-completeness includes value restoration, not just function.
Florida Pattern Analysis
Across reported third-party DV claims in Florida involving moderate-to-major structural damage on late-model vehicles, insurer initial offers under formula-based methods typically run $400 to $1,800. Settlements after submission of independent USPAP-compliant appraisals and demand letters citing McHale and § 626.9743 typically resolve at 3–5x the initial offer. The Florida luxury vehicle market (Miami, Naples, West Palm Beach) consistently produces the highest documented DV percentages of pre-accident value, while the high-volume non-luxury market (Orlando, Tampa, Jacksonville) tracks the national average.

Comparing Florida and Georgia DV Rights

Florida and Georgia border each other and have similar climates — but their DV legal landscapes are nearly opposite.

FactorFloridaGeorgia
First-party recovery✗ No (per Siegle)✓ Yes (per Mabry)
Third-party recovery✓ Yes (per McHale)✓ Yes
Recovery when at fault✗ No✓ Yes (with collision)
Statute of limitations4 years4 years
Small claims limit$8,000$15,000
Bad faith frameworkCivil Remedy Notice (§ 624.155)O.C.G.A. § 33-4-6 (50% / $5K)
17c formula required✗ No✗ No (DOI directive)
Comparative negligenceModified, 51% barModified, 50% bar

Florida Diminished Value Questions

What if the at-fault driver has only minimum coverage?
Florida's minimum PD liability coverage is just $10,000. If the repair cost alone consumes most of the policy limit, there may be little or nothing left for DV recovery. Your options: (1) UMPD coverage on your own policy, if you carry it; (2) pursuing the at-fault driver personally for the excess (rarely fruitful unless they have significant assets); (3) accepting that recovery is capped at policy limits.
Can I file a DV claim if I'm a snowbird and I bought the car in another state?
Yes, if the accident occurred in Florida. Florida law applies to the substantive evaluation of the claim because the loss happened there. The location of vehicle purchase or your home state is generally not controlling. However, if you titled and registered in Florida, your insurance policy is likely a Florida policy with Florida UMPD coverage available.
How does Florida tort reform affect DV claims?
Florida's 2023 tort reform (HB 837) tightened the modified comparative negligence rule from 50%-bar to 51%-bar and made changes to bad-faith claims procedures. These changes affect DV claims at the margins — if you're assigned 50% fault, you can still recover 50% of your DV under Florida law. Bad-faith claim procedures are now stricter, with mandatory CRN compliance and abbreviated cure periods.
Are rental cars covered for DV in Florida?
Generally no. Most Florida rental car damage claims are governed by the rental contract terms rather than auto policy. If you damaged a rental car (or someone damaged a rental you were responsible for), DV is typically not part of the recovery. The exception is when a rental car is damaged in your possession by a third party — in which case the rental company holds the DV claim, not you.
What if my Florida policy has UMPD?
UMPD coverage in Florida can pay for property damage — including diminished value — when the at-fault driver is uninsured, underinsured, or unidentified (hit-and-run). UMPD has policy limits separate from your liability coverage. Filing a UMPD-based DV claim is functionally similar to a third-party claim but against your own carrier under your own policy.
How long do Florida DV claims typically take?
With professional documentation, most Florida DV claims settle within 30 to 90 days from the demand letter. Carrier responsiveness varies: some Florida carriers respond within 7-10 days; others take 4-6 weeks. Claims that proceed to small claims or county court typically resolve within 4-8 months from filing.
Can I file in Florida if I traded in or sold the car?
Yes — the DV claim is for loss of value at the time of the accident, which is fixed at that moment. The fact that you later sold the vehicle does not eliminate the claim. The trade-in offer or sale price often becomes useful corroborating evidence for the post-repair market value figure in your appraisal.
Does Florida allow DV claims on motorcycles, RVs, or commercial vehicles?
Yes. Florida DV recovery is not limited to passenger cars. Motorcycles, recreational vehicles, commercial vehicles, and even watercraft can support DV claims under McHale's broader property damage principle. The valuation methodology differs by category — commercial vehicles often involve income-based valuation, motorcycles involve specialized resale markets — but the legal right is the same.
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