Get the fair value you deserve for your totaled vehicle in Delaware
In Delaware, your auto policy's appraisal clause gives you the right to retain SecondAppraisal as your independent advocate in a total-loss dispute.
Key takeaway
Delaware's lever is Tackett/Pierce bad-faith-breach-of-contract. Unlike states that recognize a separate tort, Delaware treats bad faith as a contract breach — with the policy benefit, foreseeable consequential damages, and punitive damages available on a showing of conduct without "reasonable justification" (Tackett expressly rejects emotional-distress damages absent physical injury). Document the insurer's deviation from Reg 902's generic UCSPA standards (15-day acknowledgment, 10-day prompt-investigation, 30-day affirm/deny, written denial explanation) and the good-faith-settlement duty under 18 Del. C. § 2304 to build the no-reasonable-justification record.
How SecondAppraisal helps
- •Free consultation — we review your offer before you commit.
- •$1,000 minimum guarantee — if we accept your case and can't deliver at least $1,000 in additional value, you pay nothing.
- •Average increase: ~$3,260 across the appraisals we've negotiated.
How a total loss works in Delaware
Insurance carriers in Delaware use the Total Loss Formula (TLF) method. When the cost of repair plus the salvage value of your damaged vehicle equals or exceeds its pre-loss actual cash value (ACV), your insurer will declare your vehicle a total loss rather than authorize the repair. From that point, the dispute shifts from "will they fix it?" to "how much will they pay?"
Your appraisal-clause rights in Delaware
Most US auto policies — including those issued in Delaware — contain an appraisal clause that lets either you or the insurer demand a binding independent appraisal when you disagree on value. When invoked, you and the insurer each select a competent independent appraiser, and typically those two appraisers will agree to a new actual cash value. In the event those two appraisers are unable to agree on a value, the two appraisers can select an Umpire to break ties. Typically, you will split the cost of the third appraiser/umpire with the insurance carrier 50/50. In the event that the two appraisers are unable to agree on an umpire, the insured or the insurance carrier can petition a court with jurisdiction to select one. This rarely happens, but the chance isn't zero. The resulting valuation from any two appraisers and/or the umpire is binding.
Your Delaware rights at a glance
Generic UCSPA standards under 18 Del. Admin. Code § 902
Reg 902 imposes 15-working-day claim acknowledgment, 10-working-day prompt-investigation duty, 30-day affirm-or-deny window after proof of loss, a good-faith-settlement duty when liability is reasonably clear, a prohibition on offering substantially less than fair value, and a written-explanation-on-request requirement for denials. Reg 902 does not contain Delaware-specific auto-total-loss subsections; it is the generic NAIC-modeled UCSPA framework. § 3.5 of the regulation expressly disclaims any private right of action.
Appraisal-clause leverage for valuation disputes
Because Delaware did not adopt the NAIC-model closed-list auto-total-loss methodology subsections in its regulations, the policy's appraisal clause is the principal contractual lever for resolving valuation disputes. Personal auto policies almost universally include an appraisal clause permitting either side to demand a binding independent appraisal when the parties disagree on value.
Tackett/Pierce bad-faith-breach-of-contract claim with punitive damages exposure
Tackett v. State Farm, 653 A.2d 254 (Del. 1995), and Pierce v. International Ins. Co., 671 A.2d 1361 (Del. 1996), held that an insurer's bad-faith breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing supports the policy benefit, foreseeable consequential damages (including interest on delayed payments), and punitive damages on a showing of conduct without "reasonable justification" — i.e., deliberate or reckless disregard of contractual duties. Tackett expressly rejected recovery for emotional distress absent accompanying physical injury, and Pierce reaffirmed that limitation. Delaware does not recognize a separate tort, but the contract-based pathway reaches well beyond the disputed amount.
Total-loss-formula valuation without a statutory percentage threshold
Delaware does not impose a numeric repair-cost-to-value salvage threshold by statute. 21 Del. C. § 2512 governs title transfer on insurer total-loss settlement. Carrier total-loss decisions are made using the Total Loss Formula (repair cost + salvage value ≥ ACV), subject to the good-faith requirements of 18 Del. C. § 2304 and the Tackett/Pierce contract framework.
Adjuster and appraiser licensing under Title 18
Delaware requires adjusters and motor vehicle damage appraisers acting in Delaware to hold a Delaware Insurance Department license. The license requirement protects policyholders by ensuring the named appraiser under the policy's appraisal clause meets minimum competency and good-character standards. Verify the carrier's appraiser is currently licensed via the Delaware Insurance Department licensee lookup.
Delaware Total Loss Framework — 18 Del. C. § 2304 + 18 Del. Admin. Code 902 + Tackett/Pierce Bad-Faith
Delaware's total-loss framework rests on the UCSPA at 18 Del. C. § 2304 (no private right of action), the generic NAIC-modeled UCSPA regulation at 18 Del. Admin. Code § 902 (15-day acknowledgment, 10-day prompt-investigation, 30-day affirm-or-deny, good-faith-settlement-when-liability-clear, written denial explanation), and the Tackett/Pierce bad-faith-breach-of-contract doctrine (policy benefit + foreseeable consequential damages, with punitive damages on a showing of egregious or malicious conduct without "reasonable justification"). Delaware does NOT adopt the NAIC-model closed-list auto-total-loss subsections (no codified two-or-more-comparables rule, no statistically-valid-source method, no "right of recourse" provision); auto-total-loss valuation runs through the policy's appraisal clause and the Tackett "reasonable justification" standard rather than a Delaware regulatory mandate. Delaware also does not impose a numeric salvage-title repair-cost-to-value threshold by statute — title-transfer procedure lives at 21 Del. C. § 2512 and the framework is total-loss-formula (repair cost + salvage value ≥ ACV). Delaware requires adjuster and appraiser licensing under Title 18; SecondAppraisal Inc supplies market-research and valuation analysis a Delaware-licensed appraiser may rely on rather than serving as the appraiser of record.
Common things to look for in Delaware
Recognize these scenarios in your offer letter or comparable report — and what we do about them.
Insurer arguing § 2304 is the only path and there's no private remedy
True that § 2304 itself has no private right of action, but Tackett and Pierce open the contract-based pathway. Reg 902's generic UCSPA-style violations (failure to acknowledge within 15 working days, failure to investigate within 10 working days, failure to affirm or deny within 30 days, failure to provide a written explanation of denial on request, offer substantially less than fair value) are central evidence in proving the insurer acted without reasonable justification, which is the operational test for bad-faith breach of contract under Tackett.
Insurer asserting Reg 902 imposes Delaware-specific auto-total-loss subsections
Reg 902 is the generic NAIC-modeled UCSPA regulation; it does NOT contain Delaware-specific two-or-more-comparables, statistically-valid-source, or right-of-recourse subsections. Auto-total-loss valuation in Delaware runs through the policy's appraisal clause and the Tackett "reasonable justification" standard, not via a Delaware regulatory closed-list mandate. Insurers (and policyholders) misciting Reg 902 as if it imposed auto-specific methodology subsections are wrong on the regulation.
Insurer asserting a numeric salvage-title threshold by statute
Delaware does not impose a numeric repair-cost-to-value salvage threshold by statute. The title-transfer procedure lives at 21 Del. C. § 2512. The total-loss decision uses the Total Loss Formula (repair cost + salvage value ≥ ACV); challenges to a carrier's total-loss decision proceed through the policy's appraisal clause and the Tackett/Pierce framework, not via a statutory percentage trigger.
Lump-sum condition adjustments labeled as "vehicle condition" without supporting detail
Reg 902's good-faith-settlement-when-liability-is-clear duty plus the prohibition on offering substantially less than fair value supplies the documentary leverage. A line item that says "condition adjustment — $750" without the underlying inspection report or dollar-by-dollar breakdown supports a "substantially less than fair value" finding and feeds the Tackett analysis. The policy's appraisal clause is the contractual lever for resolving the disputed amount.
Insurer-side adjuster operating without a Delaware license
Delaware requires adjusters acting in Delaware to hold a Delaware Insurance Department license. If the insurer's adjuster is unlicensed in Delaware, that is independent regulatory leverage. Verify the carrier's adjuster and appraiser are currently licensed via the Delaware Insurance Department licensee lookup.
Delaware Department of Insurance
If you believe your insurer is acting in bad faith, you can file a complaint with Delaware Department of Insurance — Consumer Services at 800-282-8611 — insurance.delaware.gov ↗.
Relevant Delaware precedent
How SecondAppraisal helps Delaware policyholders
- Free consultation — confirm your offer is below fair market value before you commit.
- VIN-decoded option audit so every factory feature is credited.
- Accurate and appropriate comparable vehicle research.
- Line-by-line audit of the insurer's adjustments.
- Once you invoke the appraisal clause, we carry out the appraisal process.
Frequently asked questions
What is the total-loss threshold in Delaware?▼
Can I invoke the appraisal clause in a third-party insurance carrier / at-fault insurance carrier claim in Delaware?▼
What does SecondAppraisal cost in Delaware?▼
How long does a Delaware total-loss appraisal take?▼
Ready to push back on a low Delaware total-loss offer?
Start a free consultation in 5 minutes. Our clients average $3,260 in additional settlement value — and we guarantee at least $1,000 more or you pay nothing.
Start Free Consultation