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📍 Delaware · Third-Party DV Recoverable · Modified Comparative · 2-Year SOL

Delaware Diminished Value Claims — The Complete Guide.

Delaware recognizes the market value your vehicle lost after an accident as recoverable property damage from the at-fault driver. The fault rule is forgiving (recover if you were not more than 50% at fault), the clock is two years, and if the at-fault driver was uninsured, your own UMPD coverage may pick up the DV. And no, Delaware's mandatory PIP does not make it a no-fault state, you keep the full right to recover from the driver who hit you.

DV Recognized
Third-Party + UM
Statute of Limitations
2 Years
Fault Rule
Modified (51% bar)
Case Law
None Reported
Get Your Diminished Value Report USPAP-compliant appraisal. Three tiers from $49.99.

A Recoverable Loss, With a UM Backstop.

Delaware treats the residual drop in your vehicle's market value after a proper repair as compensable property damage when another driver is at fault, measured under the general rule for damaged property: the difference between the vehicle's market value before the loss and after. Recovery is pursued against the at-fault driver's liability insurer, or, if that driver was uninsured, potentially under your own uninsured-motorist property-damage (UMPD) coverage. There is no reported Delaware appellate decision focused on vehicle diminished value, so the right rests on that general measure and on your documentation.

So if you were rear-ended in Wilmington, Dover, Newark, Middletown, Smyrna, or Bear and your car was properly repaired, the at-fault driver's insurer owes you the gap between your vehicle's pre-accident market value and its lower post-repair value, and you have two years to pursue it.

Delaware requires PIP, but it is NOT a no-fault state
Delaware drivers must carry Personal Injury Protection (PIP), along with bodily-injury and property-damage liability, but Delaware is not a true no-fault state. You keep the full right to sue the at-fault driver. PIP pays your injury and medical costs regardless of fault; it does not cover vehicle property damage. Diminished value is a property-damage claim, so it is pursued the normal way, against the at-fault driver's liability/property-damage coverage, not through PIP and not against your own injury benefits. The PIP requirement does not limit your DV claim.

Three facts define a Delaware DV claim:

1. The loss is recoverable. DV is the after-repair value difference, recoverable as property damage from the at-fault driver, with a UMPD backstop if that driver was uninsured.

2. The fault rule is forgiving. Delaware is modified comparative (10 Del. C. § 8132): you recover if you were not more than 50% at fault, reduced in proportion to your share.

3. The clock is short, two years. Treat a Delaware DV claim as subject to the two-year auto-accident statute of limitations (§ 8119), and file within that window.

The Rules That Govern Delaware DV Claims

Delaware's framework rests on its general property-damage measure and statutes rather than a DV-specific case: the lost market value is compensable, recovery is reduced and capped by a forgiving 51% fault bar, there is a UMPD backstop, and the window is two years, third-party. Because there is no controlling DV precedent, credible documentation is what carries the claim.

General Property-Damage Measure · No Reported Delaware DV Precedent · UMPD Backstop
DV is recoverable property damage, with no DV-specific case on the books.
No published Delaware appellate decision squarely addresses vehicle diminished value. Recovery rests on the general measure of damages for negligently damaged property, the difference between the vehicle's market value before and after the loss, which a repaired-but-stigmatized vehicle fits. Delaware recovery is a third-party claim against the at-fault driver's insurer, and Delaware also allows DV under your own uninsured-motorist property-damage (UMPD) coverage when the at-fault driver was uninsured. With no controlling case, this general measure plus your evidence carries the claim.
✓ A not-at-fault Delaware driver can recover the documented post-repair value difference from the at-fault driver's insurer, or from their own UMPD coverage if that driver was uninsured.
10 Del. C. § 8132 — Modified Comparative Negligence (51% Bar)
Recover if your fault was not greater than the other party's.
Delaware follows modified comparative negligence. Contributory negligence does not bar recovery in actions for negligence resulting in death or injury to person or property where the plaintiff's negligence was not greater than the negligence of the defendant, or the combined negligence of all defendants, you can be up to 50% at fault and still recover, with damages diminished in proportion to your share. You are barred only if you were more than 50% (51% or more) at fault. For diminished value, a clean not-at-fault accident carries the full claim; shared fault reduces it proportionally, so long as your fault does not exceed half.
✓ Up to 50% at fault and you still recover (reduced proportionally). Barred only above 50%, a comparatively forgiving rule.
10 Del. C. § 8119 — Two-Year Statute of Limitations
Two years from the accident, treat DV as subject to the same clock.
Delaware applies a two-year statute of limitations to auto-accident claims (§ 8119 governs personal-injury claims arising from the crash). Delaware's exact limitations period for vehicle property damage can be a point of dispute, so the safe course is to treat a DV claim as subject to that two-year window. Document early and file within two years of the accident, comparable-sales evidence is strongest soon after the loss, and an expired claim recovers nothing.
⚠ Treat DV as subject to the two-year auto-accident clock (§ 8119). Do not assume a longer window.
First-Party Exclusion · UMPD vs. Collision · At-Fault Bar
UMPD can help; collision usually won't.
Delaware diminished value runs first against the at-fault driver's liability insurer, and may also be recoverable under your own UMPD coverage if that driver was uninsured. Two cautions: your own collision coverage generally excludes DV unless your policy explicitly says otherwise, and you cannot claim DV if you were the at-fault driver. Some carriers also place limits on UMPD, so read your declarations page. The reliable primary path remains a third-party claim against an at-fault, insured driver.
⚠ UMPD may cover DV if the at-fault driver was uninsured; first-party collision generally does not, and the at-fault driver cannot claim DV.
Delaware Pattern Analysis
Delaware DV claims are won on evidence, not citations. DV is recoverable property damage, with a UMPD backstop, but with no controlling Delaware case, an insurer will rarely deny that DV exists, it will argue the amount, often opening with a low 17c number, and it will probe for any claimant fault that could trip the 51% bar. The decisive countermove is a USPAP-grade appraisal built on real Delaware comparable sales, condition and mileage adjustments, and shown calculations, filed against the at-fault driver's insurer (or your UMPD coverage), with a clean liability record, inside the two-year window.

Insurers May Quote 17c in Delaware — But It Has No Legal Force Here.

The 17c formula originated in Georgia's State Farm v. Mabry settlement and carries no statutory or precedential weight in Delaware. A Delaware DV claim is measured by the vehicle's actual loss in market value, the before-and-after difference, so an insurer that opens with a 17c-based number is offering a negotiating anchor, not applying Delaware law.

That cuts in your favor. The 17c formula caps DV at a small fraction of pre-accident value and applies aggressive damage and mileage modifiers, so its output is almost always far below the true market loss a comparable-sales analysis documents. Because Delaware measures the loss as the full before-and-after market difference, an insurer's 17c offer is simply the floor of the negotiation. Run the number so you know what they are anchoring to, then counter with market evidence of the actual loss.

17c calculator

See what a 17c-based offer looks like, then compare it against the market-based loss your Delaware claim can actually document and recover.

17c Formula Calculator
Run the 17c formula that most major auto insurers use to evaluate diminished value claims. Compare it against actual market-based loss.
17c Formula Result
$0
What the insurer will offer
Market-Based DV
$0
What you're actually owed
Note: Industry-standard formula not adopted by any state DOI.
Get a Defensible Market-Based Appraisal — $149.99

Filing a Diminished Value Claim in Delaware.

Delaware recognizes your right to recover the value your vehicle lost from the at-fault party, with a UMPD backstop. With no controlling case, the process is about building credible evidence to do the work precedent would do elsewhere, and pressing a documented demand within the two-year window.

  1. Identify the coverage lane. Delaware DV runs against the at-fault driver's liability insurer, or under your own UMPD coverage if that driver was uninsured. It is not a PIP claim (PIP is for injury) and not, in most cases, a first-party collision claim.
  2. Complete repairs and gather documentation. The crash report (required in Delaware for injury, death, or property damage of $500 or more), repair invoices, pre- and post-repair photographs, and a Carfax/accident-history record establish both liability and the loss.
  3. Establish pre-accident market value (PAMV). Use actual comparable sales from Delaware markets, Wilmington, Dover, Newark. Local comparable sales control; book values are only a starting point.
  4. Commission a USPAP-grade valuation report. With no controlling Delaware DV case, the appraisal carries the claim. The report must show comparable selection, condition and mileage adjustments, and working calculations, not a single bare figure an adjuster can wave off.
  5. Send a written demand with the appraisal attached. Frame the loss as recoverable property damage under Delaware's before-and-after market measure, state your documented number, attach the appraisal, and set a reasonable response deadline.
  6. Counter the 17c lowball with market evidence. Expect a 17c-based offer. Do not argue the formula on its own terms, replace it with your comparable-sales analysis, which reflects the actual market loss Delaware lets you recover.
  7. Mind comparative fault. If some fault may be assigned to you, remember Delaware lets you recover up to 50% fault (reduced proportionally) and bars recovery above 50%. Build the liability record accordingly.
  8. Escalate to the Delaware Department of Insurance if needed. The Department's Consumer Services division takes complaints about insurer claims handling. A complaint frequently moves a stalled or unreasonably low claim.
  9. Consider the Justice of the Peace Court for smaller amounts. Delaware's Justice of the Peace Court hears small claims up to $15,000, a fast, informal, attorney-optional venue well suited to a documented DV claim.
  10. File within two years. Treat the SOL as two years (§ 8119). Document early, the comparable-sales evidence is strongest soon after the loss.
The single most valuable Delaware move
Put a credible, USPAP-grade valuation report on file early, against the at-fault driver's insurer (or your UMPD coverage). Because Delaware has no controlling DV precedent, the documentation is the claim, it is what an adjuster cannot dismiss and what turns a low 17c offer into a market-based recovery. Use Delaware-specific comparable sales, keep liability under 50%, and file within the two-year window.

Right Lane, Documented Number.

Delaware gives you a recoverable right with a UMPD backstop and a forgiving fault rule, but no case to cite and a short clock. Three things determine the outcome:

1. Getting the lane right. DV is a third-party property-damage claim, with UMPD as a backstop, not a PIP claim and not, usually, a first-party claim. Directing it correctly is half the battle.

2. The quality of your valuation evidence. With no DV precedent, your appraisal carries the claim. A USPAP-grade report with real Delaware comparable sales is what beats the 17c anchor.

3. Fault and the clock. Recovery is reduced by your fault and barred above 50%, and the claim should be filed within two years. A clean liability record and prompt action protect both.

Delaware Diminished Value Questions.

Can I recover diminished value in Delaware?
Yes, as a third-party claim if another driver was at fault. Delaware recognizes the loss in a vehicle's market value as recoverable property damage under the general before-and-after measure, pursued against the at-fault driver's insurer. There is no reported Delaware appellate DV case, so the claim rests on general property-damage principles and on strong documentation. Delaware also allows DV under your own uninsured-motorist property-damage coverage if the at-fault driver was uninsured.
Does Delaware's mandatory PIP make it a no-fault state for diminished value?
No. Delaware requires Personal Injury Protection (PIP), but Delaware is not a true no-fault state, you keep the full right to sue the at-fault driver. PIP pays your injury and medical costs regardless of fault; it does not cover vehicle property damage. Diminished value is a property-damage claim, so it is pursued the normal way, against the at-fault driver's liability/property-damage coverage, not through PIP. The PIP requirement does not limit your DV claim.
How does Delaware's comparative negligence rule affect my claim?
Delaware uses modified comparative negligence (10 Del. C. § 8132), which expressly covers injury to property. You can recover as long as your negligence was not greater than the other party's, in a two-party crash, 50% or less, with damages reduced in proportion to your fault. You are barred only if you were more than 50% (51% or more) at fault. Example: 30% at fault on a $5,000 DV loss yields $3,500; at 51% or more, nothing. A clean not-at-fault accident carries the full claim.
What is the statute of limitations for a Delaware DV claim?
Two years. Delaware applies a two-year statute of limitations to auto-accident claims (10 Del. C. § 8119), and diminished value should be treated as subject to that two-year window. Because the exact limitations period for property damage can be a point of dispute, the safe course is to document early and file within two years of the accident, an expired claim recovers nothing.
Can I claim diminished value through my own insurance in Delaware?
Sometimes. Delaware allows DV under your own uninsured-motorist property-damage (UMPD) coverage when the at-fault driver was uninsured, so check your UMPD limits (some policies cap them). Your own collision coverage, by contrast, generally excludes DV unless your policy says otherwise, and you cannot claim DV if you were the at-fault driver. The primary path is a third-party claim against the at-fault driver's insurer.
Does Delaware use the 17c formula?
No. The 17c formula came from Georgia's State Farm v. Mabry settlement and has no legal force in Delaware. A Delaware DV claim is measured by the actual loss in market value, the before-and-after difference, so a credible market-based appraisal controls. An insurer quoting a 17c number in Delaware is offering a negotiating floor, not applying Delaware law.
Is a diminished value report worth it in Delaware?
Yes, and it matters more here because there is no controlling Delaware DV case. Without a precedent to cite, the strength of your documentation does the persuading. A credible USPAP-grade appraisal with real Delaware comparable-sales data makes the loss concrete and hard to dismiss, documents the number, and anchors your demand against the at-fault driver's insurer. It is the most effective tool for moving an adjuster off a low 17c offer toward full recovery.
Will filing a diminished value claim raise my Delaware insurance rates?
A third-party claim against the at-fault driver's insurer should not affect your premiums, because it is not a claim against your own policy and you were not at fault. A UMPD claim is against your own coverage but arises from a not-at-fault accident, so carriers generally cannot surcharge you for it, though it is reasonable to ask how your insurer treats UMPD claims before filing.
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Delaware Recognizes Your Loss — Now Document the Number.

Delaware lets you recover the market value your vehicle lost from the at-fault driver's insurer (or your own UMPD coverage), even after a flawless repair. With no controlling DV case, the documented number wins. With two years to act and a clean liability record, a USPAP-grade MyFairClaim appraisal proves the market loss that turns a recognized right into a real settlement.

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📚 Keep Learning

Diminished value guides to strengthen your claim

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