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Tennessee Diminished Value Claims — The Honest Guide.

Tennessee is one of the harder states for diminished value. Under Grimes v. Hancock, post-repair diminished value is not a recognized element of damages, and first-party DV was rejected in Black v. State Farm. That does not mean you have no options, it means the path is narrow and specific: uninsured-motorist claims, total-loss valuation disputes, and properly framed third-party claims. Knowing which lane applies to you is the difference between a wasted filing and a real recovery.

Post-Repair DV
Not Recognized
Statute of Limitations
3 Years
Small Claims Limit
$25,000
UMPD Path
Available
Get Your Diminished Value Report USPAP-compliant appraisal. Three tiers from $49.99.

Tennessee Closed the Easy Door — But Not Every Door.

Most states recognize that a repaired vehicle with an accident history is worth less than an identical clean-history vehicle, and they let you recover that gap. Tennessee, through its appellate courts, went the other way. The controlling decisions hold that your remedy is the cost to repair the vehicle, or the difference in market value, but not a separate post-repair "stigma" amount layered on top.

The practical effect: if you were rear-ended in Nashville or Memphis and your car was properly repaired, an insurer can point to Grimes v. Hancock and decline a routine post-repair DV demand, and a Tennessee court is likely to agree. Filing a generic "my car lost resale value after repair" claim is, in most cases, filing into a wall the appellate courts already built.

The Tennessee rule, stated plainly
Post-repair residual ("stigma") diminished value is not, on its own, a recognized element of recoverable damages in Tennessee. Any service that promises you an easy Tennessee post-repair DV recovery is not being straight with you.

Where Tennessee drivers do have real leverage is in three narrower situations, each of which rests on a different legal footing than ordinary post-repair DV:

1. Uninsured/underinsured motorist (UMPD) claims. If the at-fault driver had no insurance or too little, and you carry UMPD coverage, your own policy may pay residual diminished value depending on its exact wording. This is a contract claim under your policy, not a tort claim governed by Grimes.

2. Total-loss valuation (ACV) disputes. When an insurer totals your vehicle, the fight is over actual cash value, not diminished value, and Tennessee gives you full room to challenge a lowball ACV with market evidence. This is the most common way Tennessee drivers recover real money.

3. Properly framed third-party property-damage claims. A claim built on the correct measure of damages under Grimes, the actual repair cost or the before-and-after market difference, can still recover legitimate property loss. The framing has to match what Tennessee law actually allows.

The Decisions That Govern Tennessee DV Claims

Tennessee's framework is defined by two appellate decisions that constrain post-repair diminished value, a statute of limitations for property damage, and the state's modified comparative-fault rule. Understanding all four prevents the most common mistake, filing a routine post-repair DV demand that Tennessee law does not support.

Grimes v. Hancock, No. M2011-01940-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. June 26, 2012)
Post-repair decrease in value is not a recognized element of allowable damages in Tennessee.
The Tennessee Court of Appeals held that the measure of damages for injury to a vehicle is either the reasonable cost of repair or the difference in market value immediately before and immediately after the accident, but not both. The court specifically stated that a decrease in value measured after the repair is not a recognized element of allowable damages in Tennessee. Grimes is the controlling authority that forecloses routine post-repair "stigma" DV claims.
✗ Do not file a generic post-repair DV demand in Tennessee. Grimes is what insurers will cite, and Tennessee courts follow it.
Black v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co., 101 S.W.3d 27 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2002)
First-party diminished value is barred under Tennessee auto policies.
The Tennessee Court of Appeals declined to apply diminution of value to Tennessee automobile policies, finding the policy language unambiguous and limiting the insured to the cost of repair. The combined effect of Black and Grimes is that recovering DV from your own collision coverage in Tennessee is, in ordinary cases, not available.
✗ First-party DV under your own collision coverage is barred. Look to UMPD or total-loss valuation instead.
McIntyre v. Balentine, 833 S.W.2d 52 (Tenn. 1992)
Tennessee uses modified comparative fault with a hard 50% bar.
The Tennessee Supreme Court abolished the old contributory-negligence rule and adopted modified comparative fault: a plaintiff may recover only so long as their own fault remains less than the defendant's, with damages reduced in proportion to the plaintiff's share. At 50% fault or higher, recovery is barred entirely. For any property-damage or UMPD claim you bring, your percentage of fault directly reduces, and can eliminate, what you collect.
⚠ Document that the other driver was clearly at fault. If you are found 50% or more responsible, you recover nothing in Tennessee.
Tennessee Code Annotated § 28-3-105
Three-year statute of limitations for injury to property.
Tennessee gives you three years from the date of the accident to bring a claim for injury to property, which includes damage to your vehicle. This is longer than Texas's two years and shorter than Georgia's four. File earlier rather than later, market and comparable-sales evidence degrades quickly, and a stale claim is a weak claim.
✓ Three-year window under T.C.A. § 28-3-105. Build and file your valuation evidence well inside it.
Tennessee Pattern Analysis
Because Grimes forecloses ordinary post-repair DV, the Tennessee claims that actually recover money cluster in two places: uninsured/underinsured motorist claims where the policy language permits residual DV, and total-loss ACV disputes where the insurer's initial valuation runs 10-20% under true market value. In the total-loss lane, a market-based valuation report frequently moves a Tennessee settlement by four figures, not because of diminished value, but because the insurer's comparable software undervalued the vehicle in the first place.

Insurers Quote 17c in Tennessee — Even Where DV Barely Applies.

The 17c formula originated in Georgia's State Farm v. Mabry settlement and has no statutory force in Tennessee. You may still see carriers reference 17c or a 17c-variant when they make a small DV offer in Tennessee, often to close a UMPD or third-party file quickly.

Two things are worth understanding. First, where Tennessee law does permit recovery (UMPD, total-loss valuation), the 17c output is almost always lower than the true market loss a comparable-sales analysis documents. Second, where Grimes bars recovery, no formula creates a right that the case law has foreclosed. Run the number so you know what the insurer is anchoring to, then evaluate it against the actual legal lane your claim sits in.

17c calculator

See what a 17c-based offer looks like, then compare it against the market evidence and the recovery path that actually applies to your Tennessee situation.

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

Working a Vehicle-Value Claim in Tennessee.

Because Tennessee forecloses ordinary post-repair DV, the first and most important step is identifying which lane your situation actually fits. Filing the wrong type of claim is how Tennessee drivers waste time and money.

  1. Identify your lane first. Was the vehicle totaled? Then this is a total-loss ACV dispute, not a DV claim. Was the at-fault driver uninsured or underinsured, and do you carry UMPD? Then this is a UMPD claim under your own policy. Neither of those? Recovery is genuinely difficult in Tennessee under Grimes.
  2. If total loss: challenge the actual cash value. This is where most Tennessee drivers recover real money. Tennessee fully allows you to dispute a lowball ACV with comparable-sales evidence. A market-based total-loss valuation (a "VehicleIntel™ Fair Market Value Report") documents the gap.
  3. If UMPD: read your policy language carefully. UMPD coverage for residual diminished value depends entirely on your specific policy wording. Confirm you carry UMPD and that it is not capped in a way that excludes value loss before investing in an appraisal.
  4. Complete repairs and gather documentation. The police report, repair invoices, photographs, and a Carfax/accident-history record establish the factual basis regardless of which lane you are in.
  5. Establish pre-accident market value (PAMV). Use actual comparable sales from Tennessee markets, Nashville, Memphis, Knoxville, Chattanooga. Book values are a starting point, but local comparable sales control.
  6. Prepare a defensible valuation report. Whether you are disputing ACV or documenting UMPD residual loss, the report must show working calculations and comparable evidence, not just a single number.
  7. Frame the demand to match Tennessee law. Build the demand on the correct measure of damages under Grimes (repair cost or before-and-after market difference) for property claims, or on your policy contract for UMPD. Do not anchor a Tennessee demand on a post-repair "stigma" theory the courts have rejected.
  8. Send certified mail and allow a reasonable response window. Document every communication. Tennessee fair-claims expectations apply, and a clear paper trail matters if the dispute escalates.
  9. Escalate to the Tennessee Department of Commerce & Insurance if needed. The TDCI Consumer Insurance Services division accepts complaints about claims handling and can apply pressure to a carrier that is not negotiating in good faith.
  10. General Sessions / small claims as a last resort. Tennessee's General Sessions Court handles disputes up to $25,000, attorney representation is allowed and appeals are permitted. Frame the case on the measure of damages Tennessee actually recognizes.
The single most valuable Tennessee move
If your vehicle was totaled, focus your energy on the actual-cash-value dispute, not on diminished value. Tennessee insurers routinely undervalue total-loss settlements, and that gap is fully recoverable with market evidence, no Grimes obstacle, no policy-language fight.

Total Loss Is Where Tennessee Drivers Actually Win.

When repair costs approach or exceed a vehicle's value, the insurer declares a total loss and pays actual cash value (ACV) minus your deductible. Because Grimes takes ordinary post-repair DV off the table, the total-loss ACV dispute is the most reliable way Tennessee drivers recover money they are genuinely owed.

Two situations recur in Tennessee:

1. The total-loss valuation is too low. Tennessee insurers commonly settle total losses 10-20% below true market value using regional comparable software that misses trim, options, condition, and local demand. A market-based valuation report documents the real number and forces a higher settlement. This is an ACV dispute, fully available in Tennessee, and it is the highest-yield claim type in the state.

2. The insurer repaired a borderline-total vehicle. When a carrier pushes a near-total vehicle through repair to avoid a total-loss payout, the resulting condition issues can support a property-damage claim, framed on the measure of damages Tennessee allows, not on a post-repair stigma theory.

Tennessee Diminished Value Questions.

Can I recover diminished value in Tennessee?
Tennessee is a limited-recovery state. Post-repair (stigma) diminished value is generally not a recognized element of damages under Grimes v. Hancock (2012), and first-party DV under your own collision coverage was rejected in Black v. State Farm (2002). The realistic paths are an uninsured/underinsured motorist claim where your policy allows it, a total-loss actual-cash-value dispute, or a third-party property-damage claim framed on the measure of damages Tennessee actually recognizes. DV recovery is not routine in Tennessee, and any honest appraisal should tell you that up front.
What is Grimes v. Hancock and why does it matter?
Grimes v. Hancock, No. M2011-01940-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012), held that the measure of property damage in Tennessee is either the reasonable cost of repair or the difference in market value before and after the accident, but not both, and that a decrease in value measured after repair is not a recognized element of allowable damages. It is the controlling authority that makes routine post-repair DV claims very difficult in Tennessee.
What is the statute of limitations for Tennessee diminished value claims?
Three years from the date of the accident under Tennessee Code Annotated § 28-3-105, the statute governing injury to property. File well before the deadline, valuation and comparable-sales evidence is strongest soon after the loss.
What is Tennessee's small claims court limit?
Tennessee's General Sessions Court, which functions as the small claims venue, handles civil disputes up to $25,000. Attorney representation is permitted and decisions may be appealed. Most vehicle-valuation disputes fall comfortably within that limit.
Will filing a claim affect my Tennessee insurance rates?
A third-party claim against the at-fault driver's insurer should not affect your own premiums. A UMPD claim is made under your own policy, so review your policy and ask your carrier how a not-at-fault UMPD claim is treated before filing.
Can I claim diminished value through uninsured motorist coverage in Tennessee?
Often yes. If the at-fault driver was uninsured or underinsured and you carry uninsured/underinsured motorist property damage coverage, your own UMPD coverage may compensate residual diminished value, depending on your exact policy wording. Read your policy carefully, as some carriers cap or restrict UMPD.
If Tennessee bars post-repair DV, is a report worth it?
It depends entirely on your lane. If your vehicle was totaled, a market-based valuation report is very worthwhile, the ACV dispute is fully available in Tennessee and frequently recovers four figures. If you have a UMPD claim with permissive policy language, a report supports it. If you are looking at an ordinary post-repair DV claim with no UMPD and no total loss, Tennessee law is against you, and the honest answer is that a report is unlikely to change that.
How does Tennessee's comparative fault rule affect my claim?
Tennessee uses modified comparative fault under McIntyre v. Balentine (1992). You can recover only if your share of fault is less than the other driver's (below 50%), and your recovery is reduced by your fault percentage. At 50% or more, you recover nothing. Clear documentation that the other driver was at fault is essential.
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Tennessee Is Hard on DV — So Aim at the Claim That Pays.

If your vehicle was totaled, the actual-cash-value dispute is where Tennessee drivers recover real money, and a market-based valuation report is built to win it. If you have a UMPD claim, we document the residual loss your policy allows. We will tell you honestly which lane you are in.

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