Missouri Total Loss Appraisal

Get the fair value you deserve for your totaled vehicle in Missouri

In Missouri, your auto policy's appraisal clause gives you the right to retain SecondAppraisal as your independent advocate in a total-loss dispute.

Missouri Total-Loss Threshold
80% of pre-loss value
Appraisal Clause
Available in most policies
Fair Claims Settlement Practices
Mo. Rev. Stat. §§ 375.1007, 375.420; 20 CSR 100-1.050; Mo. Rev. Stat. § 301.010(51)
Official source
revisor.mo.gov

Key takeaway

Missouri's hammer is Mo. Rev. Stat. § 375.420 — the vexatious-refusal-to-pay statute. When an insurer refuses to pay a property-damage claim without reasonable cause or excuse, the court can award up to 20% of the first $1,500 of loss plus 10% of the excess plus reasonable attorney's fees on top of the contract amount and interest. 20 CSR 100-1.050 supplies the general claim-handling discipline (betterment/depreciation itemization, repair-to-pre-loss duty, timing rules), though Missouri has not adopted the NAIC closed-list valuation or right-of-recourse provisions some other states have.

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 Missouri

Insurance carriers in Missouri use the Total Loss Threshold (TLT) method. When the cost to repair your vehicle reaches 80% of 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 Missouri

Most US auto policies — including those issued in Missouri — 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 Missouri rights at a glance

Right 1

Vexatious-refusal damages and attorney's fees under Mo. Rev. Stat. § 375.420

When an insurer refuses to pay a property-damage claim "without reasonable cause or excuse," the court may award the policyholder, in addition to the contract amount and interest, damages up to 20% of the first $1,500 of loss plus 10% of any excess, plus a reasonable attorney's fee. The remedy is statutory and well-developed in Missouri auto-claim case law; documented regulatory violations under 20 CSR 100-1.050 support the "without reasonable cause" finding.

Right 2

20 CSR 100-1.050 general claim-handling discipline

The regulation imposes a 15-working-day acknowledge/deny window, a 30-day investigation-completion timeline for general claims, a repair-to-pre-loss-condition duty, and a betterment/depreciation rule under which reductions "shall be itemized and shall be appropriate in amount." Missouri has not adopted the NAIC closed-list valuation methods, the 30-day right of recourse, or the mandatory sales-tax-on-total-loss provision used in some other states; the genuine regulatory anchors are the timing rules and the betterment/depreciation itemization standard.

Right 3

80% salvage-vehicle definition under Mo. Rev. Stat. § 301.010(51)

The 80% repair-to-fair-market-value salvage-branding threshold lives in the "Salvage vehicle" definition at § 301.010(51), not at § 301.193. It applies only when the vehicle was damaged within six years of the manufacturer's model-year designation.

Missouri Total Loss Framework — RSMo §§ 375.1007, 375.420 + 20 CSR 100-1.050

Missouri's total-loss framework rests on the UCSPA at Mo. Rev. Stat. § 375.1007 (no private right of action), the general claim-handling regulation at 20 CSR 100-1.050 (which includes a betterment/depreciation rule that such reductions be itemized and appropriate in amount, a repair-to-pre-loss-condition duty, and a 15-working-day acknowledge/deny window — but does NOT codify closed-list valuation methods, a "30-day right of recourse," or a mandatory sales-tax-on-total-loss provision), and Mo. Rev. Stat. § 375.420 — the vexatious-refusal-to-pay statute that lets a successful claimant recover, on top of the contract amount and interest, damages of up to 20% of the first $1,500 of loss plus 10% of the excess and reasonable attorney's fees, when the insurer refused to pay "without reasonable cause or excuse." § 375.420 is one of the older and most-cited statutory bad-faith frameworks in the country. The 80% salvage-branding threshold lives at § 301.010(51) (the "Salvage vehicle" definition) and applies to vehicles damaged within six years of the manufacturer's model-year designation.

Missouri regulates first-party automobile total losses through three layered authorities: the Unfair Claim Settlement Practices Act at Mo. Rev. Stat. § 375.1007, the implementing total-loss claims regulation at 20 CSR 100-1.050, and the vexatious-refusal-to-pay statute at Mo. Rev. Stat. § 375.420 (and § 375.296 for life and health). Missouri does not impose a separate licensing requirement on a policyholder's appraiser invoked under the policy's appraisal clause. Mo. Rev. Stat. § 375.1007 — Improper Claim Practices. The statute defines acts that constitute improper claim practices when committed in conscious disregard of the policy or with such frequency as to indicate a general business practice, including: misrepresenting pertinent facts or policy provisions; failing to acknowledge with reasonable promptness pertinent communications; failing to adopt and implement reasonable standards for the prompt investigation of claims; refusing to pay claims without conducting a reasonable investigation; failing to affirm or deny coverage within a reasonable time after proof-of-loss requirements are completed; not attempting in good faith to effectuate prompt, fair, and equitable settlement when liability is reasonably clear; compelling insureds to institute litigation to recover amounts due by offering substantially less than the amounts ultimately recovered; and failing to promptly settle a claim under one portion of a policy in order to influence settlements under other portions. 20 CSR 100-1.050 — Standards for Prompt, Fair and Equitable Settlement of Claims. Missouri's claim-handling regulation imposes general timing and conduct standards on insurers (e.g., a 15-working-day acknowledge/deny window, a 30-day investigation-completion timeline for general claims) and supplies a small set of auto-specific provisions, including: a prohibition on steering third-party claimants to their own policy; a prohibition on requiring unreasonable travel; subrogation and deductible rules; estimate and after-market-parts disclosure rules; a "betterment or depreciation" rule requiring such reductions to be itemized and appropriate in amount; a repair-to-pre-loss-condition duty; and a rule that a cash settlement cannot be less than the repair amount other than in total-loss situations. Missouri has NOT adopted the NAIC Model Reg #902 closed-list valuation methods, a "30-day right of recourse," a mandatory sales-tax/fees-inclusion provision tied to a comparable vehicle, or a "loss-vehicle-specific documentation" deduction rule; those provisions appear in other states' regulations but not in 20 CSR 100-1.050. Mo. Rev. Stat. § 375.420 — Vexatious Refusal to Pay (Damage Claims). If it appears from the evidence that an insurer has refused to pay a loss without reasonable cause or excuse, the court or jury, in addition to the amount due under the policy and interest, may allow the plaintiff damages not to exceed twenty percent of the first $1,500 of the loss, plus ten percent of the amount of the loss in excess of $1,500, and a reasonable attorney's fee. The remedy applies to insurance against personal property damage, including auto total-loss claims. The "without reasonable cause or excuse" standard is the operational test. Mo. Rev. Stat. § 301.010(51) — Salvage Vehicle Definition; 80% Threshold. The 80% repair-to-fair-market-value threshold for salvage branding is at § 301.010(51) (the "Salvage vehicle" definition), not § 301.193. The threshold applies only when the vehicle was damaged during a year that is no more than six years after the manufacturer's model-year designation. § 301.193 itself governs abandoned-property titling procedures and certain insurer claims-adjustment titling for abandoned salvage; it does not codify the 80% threshold. Missouri does not impose a separate licensing requirement on a policyholder's appraiser invoked under the policy's appraisal clause.
As of May 21, 2026
Excerpt — full statute at official source.

Common things to look for in Missouri

Recognize these scenarios in your offer letter or comparable report — and what we do about them.

Scenario

Insurer treating the § 375.420 "reasonable cause or excuse" standard as a high bar

What we do

Missouri courts have applied § 375.420 broadly. An insurer's failure to investigate, reliance on a position without legal or factual support, or refusal to honor 20 CSR 100-1.050's general claim-handling discipline (timing rules, betterment/depreciation itemization, repair-to-pre-loss duty) can support a vexatious-refusal finding. Build your file around documented regulatory deviations and the timeline of the insurer's conduct.

Scenario

Lump-sum or non-appropriate betterment/depreciation reductions

What we do

20 CSR 100-1.050(2)(E) requires betterment/depreciation reductions to be itemized and appropriate in amount. A line-item like "condition adjustment: $1,200" with no itemization or rational basis violates that requirement and supports a § 375.420 "without reasonable cause" inference.

Scenario

Insurer citing a Missouri "30-day right of recourse" or mandatory total-loss tax-inclusion regulation

What we do

Neither provision is codified in 20 CSR 100-1.050. If a carrier or third-party administrator references one, ask for the precise regulatory citation; the genuine framework is the betterment/depreciation itemization rule plus the policy language and proof of replacement-vehicle purchase for sales-tax recovery.

Missouri Department of Insurance

If you believe your insurer is acting in bad faith, you can file a complaint with Missouri Department of Commerce and Insurance — Consumer Affairs at 800-726-7390insurance.mo.gov.

Relevant Missouri precedent

Missouri's vexatious-refusal-to-pay doctrine is one of the oldest statutory bad-faith remedies in the country, tracing back to the 1879 enactment that became Mo. Rev. Stat. § 375.420 (and the parallel life and health version at § 375.296). The Missouri Supreme Court in DeWitt v. American Family Mutual Insurance Co., 667 S.W.2d 700 (Mo. banc 1984), confirmed that the "without reasonable cause or excuse" standard is fact-intensive and that an insurer's failure to investigate or its reliance on a position without legal or factual support supports a vexatious-refusal finding. Missouri's first-party total-loss case law turns on § 375.420's "without reasonable cause or excuse" inquiry combined with general claim-handling principles. The Missouri Department of Commerce and Insurance enforces 20 CSR 100-1.050 directly through its consumer-complaint process, and the Department's findings can inform civil litigation. In the auto-claim context, recent multistate class actions targeting "typical-negotiation adjustment" and similar undocumented Audatex/CCC line items have been pleaded as § 375.420 vexatious-refusal claims combined with the betterment/depreciation itemization standard at 20 CSR 100-1.050(2)(E). Missouri does NOT have a NAIC-style closed-list valuation regulation or a 30-day right of recourse, so plaintiffs anchor their regulatory claims on the betterment/depreciation rule, the timing rules, and the repair-to-pre-loss-condition duty.

How SecondAppraisal helps Missouri policyholders

  1. Free consultation — confirm your offer is below fair market value before you commit.
  2. VIN-decoded option audit so every factory feature is credited.
  3. Accurate and appropriate comparable vehicle research.
  4. Line-by-line audit of the insurer's adjustments.
  5. Once you invoke the appraisal clause, we carry out the appraisal process.

Frequently asked questions

What is the total-loss threshold in Missouri?
Missouri's total-loss threshold is 80% of pre-loss actual cash value (ACV) — a Total Loss Threshold (TLT) regime. Once the cost of repair reaches 80% of ACV, your insurer is required to declare your vehicle a total loss instead of authorizing repair.
Can I invoke the appraisal clause in a third-party insurance carrier / at-fault insurance carrier claim in Missouri?
Generally no — the appraisal clause is part of YOUR policy, not the at-fault driver's. If you are stuck with a third-party insurance carrier that refuses to negotiate, you can often switch to a first-party claim under your own policy and let your insurer pursue subrogation.
What does SecondAppraisal cost in Missouri?
Your initial consultation is free. If we agree to be your appraiser, our service includes a $199 total-loss valuation report plus up to 2 hours of research and negotiation at $149/hour. Our clients average $3,260 in additional settlement value, and we only proceed when we believe we can secure at least $1,000 more — if we take on your consultation and can't deliver that minimum, you pay nothing.
How long does a Missouri total-loss appraisal take?
Simple cases can take a few days up to a few weeks (2-3). Most settle within 1-2 weeks. Disputed cases may take 30 days or longer.

Ready to push back on a low Missouri 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.

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