How to Counter Insurance Adjuster Tactics in Injury Settlement Negotiations

Most insurance adjusters in California aren’t out to ruin you. They’re following a script. The same script every adjuster gets when an injury claim comes in: open low, ask for things you don’t have to give, and run the clock until you get desperate enough to sign. Once you understand the script, the moves stop working. This guide walks through the five tactics adjusters use most, the exact counter for each one, and the California-specific rules that put real teeth behind your pushback.
Key Takeaways
- California insurers must acknowledge a claim within 15 calendar days and accept or deny within 40 days under the Fair Claims Settlement Practices Regulations.
- State regulations explicitly prohibit settlement offers that are “unreasonably low.” That phrase is in the regulation, verbatim.
- You are not legally required to give a recorded statement to the at-fault driver’s insurer.
- Signing a blanket medical authorization gives the insurer access to your full history, not just records related to your injury.
- The California Department of Insurance accepts complaints against insurers for claims handling violations.
| What They’re Doing | How to Counter |
|---|---|
| The Speed Trap – Pushing a quick offer in week one, before your injuries have fully shown up. | Decline in writing. Notify the insurer in writing that you will respond once your medical condition has been fully evaluated. |
| The Recorded Statement Request – Locking you into early facts to mine for inconsistencies later. No California law requires one for the at-fault driver’s insurer. | Decline. Consider consulting with an attorney before providing any statement. |
| The Blanket Medical Authorization – A HIPAA release that opens up your full medical history, not just the accident-related records. | Don’t sign it. You have the right to provide only records relevant to the injuries sustained in the accident. |
| Disputing Medical Necessity – Labeling treatment “excessive” or “premature” without a medical opinion behind it. | Request the denial in writing with specific reasons cited. You have the right to challenge any denial of medical necessity with supporting documentation from your treating physician. |
| Social Media Surveillance – Watching your public accounts for anything they can argue against you. | Avoid posting on social media during the claims process. Review and update your privacy settings on all platforms. |
What Insurance Adjusters Are Actually Trying to Do
The adjuster who calls you the day after the accident is friendly, sympathetic, and fast. That’s the job. Their internal metrics measure two things: how quickly the file closes and how little it costs to close it. National claims handling redesigned itself in the 1990s around exactly that. The adjuster reaching out is working from a playbook designed to settle fast and cheap before the full extent of an injury is known. The early offer almost never reflects what the case is worth. It reflects what the file looks like before the evidence comes in.
Five Common Adjuster Tactics and How to Counter Each One
1. The Speed Trap
The earliest offer is the cheapest one. Adjusters know that soft-tissue injuries can take weeks to manifest, traumatic brain injury symptoms surface gradually, and surgical recommendations often don’t come until imaging is reviewed. They want the file closed before any of that happens.
Counter: Decline in writing. Something close to: “I’m still receiving treatment and not yet in a position to evaluate the full scope of my damages. I’ll respond once my condition has stabilized.” That sentence costs you nothing. The urgency is theirs, not yours.
2. The Recorded Statement Request
There is no California statute, regulation, or case law requiring a third-party claimant to give a recorded statement to the at-fault driver’s insurer. The “cooperation clause” sometimes cited at you applies to your own policy with your own insurer. It has no force when the adjuster works for the other side. Recorded statements get used to lock you into early facts before adrenaline wears off, and to surface inconsistencies later that get framed as credibility problems.
Counter: “I’m willing to provide written information through my attorney. I won’t be giving a recorded statement.” If you don’t have an attorney yet, replace that phrase with “in writing.”
3. The Blanket Medical Authorization
The HIPAA release the adjuster sends in week one is rarely limited to the accident. It usually authorizes every provider, every condition, every record from the past several years. That’s how a claim about whiplash becomes an argument about a back tweak you mentioned to a doctor in 2019. California’s Civil Code §56.11 requires medical authorizations to state specific uses and limitations on how the information will be used. Most insurer-sent forms don’t.
Counter: Don’t sign it. Request your own records and send only those related to the injury at issue. The eggshell plaintiff rule still protects you if the accident worsened a prior condition, but that argument is yours to make on your terms.
4. Disputing Medical Necessity
Once your records are in, the adjuster turns them against you. The chiropractic visits become “excessive.” The MRI is suddenly “premature.” Physical therapy “exceeded standard duration.” None of those arguments require an actual medical opinion. Adjusters write them anyway.
Counter: Ask for the denial in writing. Under California claims regulations, an insurer that disputes liability or damages on a third-party claim must do so in writing, with the specific bases for the dispute. A vague verbal dispute can be characterized in any way later. A written one cannot.
5. Social Media Surveillance
Public posts get pulled the day the claim is filed. A wedding photo, a vacation check-in, a workout video. Anything visible can be argued out of context. Defense attorneys have routinely subpoenaed even private accounts in California civil litigation, and California courts have allowed broad discovery despite the state’s constitutional privacy protections.
Counter: Stop posting from the day of the accident through the resolution of the claim. Don’t delete old content. Deletion creates spoliation issues that can be worse than the posts. Just go quiet.
How to Build a Negotiation Position They Can’t Ignore
Two moves matter most before anyone trades numbers.
Calculate your full damages before responding
Hard damages are the floor: medical bills, lost wages, projected future medical costs, and property damage. Pain and suffering layers on top, typically calculated using a multiplier of 1.5 to 5, depending on injury severity. The adjuster’s first number is almost always built on the hard damages alone. Sometimes, only the bills already incurred. That isn’t a settlement valuation. It’s a starting position designed to look reasonable until you do the math.
Send a written demand letter and force itemized responses
A demand letter forces the insurer to respond in writing and creates the paper trail California regulations require. Once they respond, ask them to itemize. What part of the offer is for medicals? Lost wages? Non-economic damages? Refusal to itemize becomes part of the record. Vague offers are how lowballs survive scrutiny. Itemized ones can’t hide.
If They’re Stalling or Acting in Bad Faith, Know California Law
California regulates how insurers handle claims, and the timelines aren’t suggestions. An insurer must acknowledge a claim within 15 calendar days and accept or deny within 40 days of receiving proof of claim. Extensions are allowed, but only with written notice explaining why.
The single most useful piece of regulatory language to keep in your file: California regulations state that “no insurer shall attempt to settle a claim by making a settlement offer that is unreasonably low.” Quote that line directly when responding to a lowball in writing.
If those rules are violated, you can file a complaint with the California Department of Insurance. The 16 unfair claims practices defined in California Insurance Code §790.03(h) form the backbone of those complaints. The CDI process is regulatory rather than litigation, but the threat of regulatory exposure is something insurers actually take seriously.
FAQ
What should you not say to an insurance adjuster?
Don’t speculate about fault. Don’t estimate vehicle speeds. Don’t describe your injuries before treatment is complete. “I don’t know” is a complete answer. So is “I’d prefer to respond in writing.”
How do you beat an insurance adjuster?
You don’t. You make their script not work. Refuse the recorded statement, refuse the blanket authorization, document everything in writing, and never accept the first offer.
When does it make sense to hire a personal injury attorney in California?
The Insurance Research Council, which is funded by the insurance industry itself, has consistently found that represented claimants receive substantially higher settlements than unrepresented ones, even after attorney fees. Disputed liability, ongoing treatment, or an offer that doesn’t cover your bills is the threshold worth taking seriously.
Talk to Someone Before You Sign
Adjusters at every major California insurer work from the same playbook. Knowing the moves doesn’t mean you should run a serious case alone. It means you have a chance to push back without giving away ground you can’t recover. If your claim involves significant injuries, disputed liability, or an offer that doesn’t cover your medical bills, talking to a California personal injury attorney before signing tends to change the math.
At DK Law, we offer a free consultation to review your legal options. No pressure, just answers.
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