Ohio Diminished Value Claims — The Complete Guide.
Ohio's DV framework is well-developed: a 1959 Ohio Supreme Court decision (Falter v. City of Toledo) establishing recovery, a 2007 Court of Appeals decision (Rakich v. Anthem) clarifying that BOTH repair cost AND residual diminution are recoverable, and a 2024 reaffirmation (Hyden v. Anderson). Uniquely, Ohio UMPD coverage CAN cover DV — a feature very few states share.
Ohio's Both Repair AND Diminution Standard.
Ohio's DV framework was clarified in the 2007 Tenth District Court of Appeals decision in Rakich v. Anthem Blue Cross & Blue Shield, which held: "Where a plaintiff can prove that the value of a damaged vehicle after repair is less than the vehicle's worth before the injury, the plaintiff may recover both the reasonable cost of repair and the residual diminution in value after repair, provided that the award does not exceed the gross diminution in value." This is a powerful framework — recovery is the sum of both elements, capped only by the total pre-vs-post difference.
Ohio's foundational case is Falter v. City of Toledo, 169 Ohio St. 238, 158 N.E.2d 893 (1959), establishing the principle. Braum v. Kinderdine (2nd Dist. 2015) and Hyden v. Anderson (2024-Ohio-1578) reaffirm Rakich's framework. Critically — and unusually — Ohio Department of Insurance Rule 3901-1-54 and case authority allow Ohio UMPD to cover DV, giving claimants a recovery path for hit-and-run and uninsured-driver scenarios that doesn't exist in most states.
Ohio's Multi-Decision DV Framework
Ohio's framework rests on four decisions spanning 65 years: Falter (1959), Rakich (2007), Braum (2015), and Hyden (2024). The framework is settled.
Ohio Insurers Use 17c — Rakich Doesn't.
Ohio's controlling standard from Rakich is market-based: pre-accident value, post-repair value, and reasonable repair cost — all admissible. The 17c formula's mechanical multipliers don't match this standard. Major Ohio insurers (Progressive headquartered in Mayfield Village, Nationwide in Columbus, Allstate, State Farm) default to 17c. A demand letter that quotes Rakich's exact language and references Hyden's 2024 reaffirmation puts the claim on solid Ohio appellate footing.
Run 17c to anticipate the insurer's initial offer, then quantify the gap to Rakich's both-elements standard:
Filing a Diminished Value Claim in Ohio.
Ohio's framework rewards both-elements claims (repair cost plus residual diminution). The 2-year SOL means timing matters. Modified comparative negligence allows partial recovery up to 49% fault. UMPD covers DV — don't overlook hit-and-run scenarios.
- Document liability. Ohio's modified comparative negligence (ORC § 2315.33) bars recovery if you're 50% or more at fault; otherwise reduces by fault percentage. Police report, witnesses, and camera footage establish your fault percentage.
- Determine the recovery path. Three options: third-party against at-fault driver's liability insurer (most common), UMPD against your own policy if at-fault driver was uninsured/hit-and-run (Ohio uniquely allows this), or first-party (rare; most policies exclude DV).
- Complete repairs. Ohio DV is calculated post-repair. Document repairs comprehensively per Hyden's emphasis on pre- and post-evidence: estimates, invoices, parts list, scan reports, frame measurements, paint thickness.
- Establish pre-accident market value. Ohio-market comparables — Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Toledo, Akron, Dayton. Ohio metro markets produce dense comparable data.
- Document the post-repair value. Two written dealer trade-in offers post-repair, plus comparable sales of similar Ohio vehicles with accident-history Carfax. Discount typically runs 12-22%.
- Prepare a USPAP-compliant appraisal. The appraisal cites Rakich v. Anthem, references Falter's gross-diminution cap, and demonstrates compliance with Hyden's requirement for pre- and post-accident market evidence.
- Send a demand letter. Quote Rakich's both-elements language. Cite Falter for the cap. Reference Hyden's 2024 reaffirmation. Note the 2-year SOL window. Send certified mail.
- Allow 30 days for response. Ohio insurers familiar with the controlling case law typically respond within 14-30 days.
- File an Ohio Department of Insurance complaint. insurance.ohio.gov handles consumer complaints. ODI can pressure insurers under Rule 3901-1-54 and other regulatory provisions.
- Small claims for $6,000 or less; municipal court above. Ohio small claims is capped at $6,000 (varies slightly by county; Cleveland Municipal Court goes to $6,000). Municipal courts handle up to $15,000 with attorneys allowed.
Ohio DV Questions
Can I recover diminished value in Ohio?
Can Ohio UMPD cover DV?
What is Ohio's statute of limitations?
What's the Rakich both-elements framework?
Will an Ohio DV claim raise my insurance rates?
What if I'm partially at fault?
How does your insurer handle DV claims?
Each major insurer has distinct DV claim-handling patterns. We've documented the playbook for each.
Both Repair AND Diminution. Recover Both.
Ohio's Rakich framework allows recovery of repair cost plus residual diminution, capped only at gross diminution. A USPAP-compliant appraisal that cites Ohio's case law unlocks both elements.
