Why Insurance Companies Keep Accident Claimants Waiting And What the Law Can Do About It
11th Jun 2026
Start with a simple question: why does a valid accident claim take months, sometimes years, to resolve, even when fault is obvious, and injuries are documented?
The honest answer isn't bureaucratic inefficiency, though that's part of it. It's economics. For large insurers, delay is a financially rational strategy, and the legal frameworks designed to discourage it are far more uneven across U.S. jurisdictions than most claimants or even many practitioners realise.
The Business Case for Waiting
Before getting into the law, it helps to understand the money.
Insurance companies operate on a model called "the float." Premiums are collected upfront. Claims are paid later. In the gap between those two events, that money is invested. For major insurers, State Farm, Allstate, Progressive, AIG, Travelers, investment income consistently ranks as the second-largest revenue source.
The implication for a pending accident claim is straightforward. Every day a valid claim sits unpaid, the insurer earns investment income on money that, in practical terms, belongs to the claimant. Delay doesn't just reduce what gets paid but also generates revenue in the meantime.
This isn't purely inference. Documents that emerged from litigation in the early 1990s revealed that Allstate commissioned McKinsey & Company in 1992 to redesign its claims handling process. The resulting strategy centred on denying, delaying, and lowballing claimants to boost profits. This approach the industry has adopted broadly in the decades since.
What Delay Actually Looks Like in Practice
What Delay Actually Looks Like in Practice
Insurers rarely announce they're stalling. Delay is engineered through structures that are harder to challenge than an outright denial and harder to prove.
The multi-department shuffle
Claim files move through multiple internal departments: First Notice of Loss, bodily injury adjustment, and, if negotiations stall, a litigation team. Industry reporting on claims handling practices indicates that most adjusters have no authority to approve settlements above a relatively modest threshold, often cited in the range of $10,000 to $25,000. Each file transfer means a new reviewer, a fresh queue, and weeks of lost time. By the time someone with real settlement authority touches the file, months may have passed.
The documentation spiral
Requesting additional documentation, some necessary, some not, creates technical grounds to pause the clock without formally denying the claim. Each new request restarts the waiting period. A claimant who isn't tracking deadlines carefully may not realise the delay is manufactured rather than procedural.
Statute of limitations pressure
In Arizona, injured claimants generally have two years to file a personal injury action under A.R.S. § 12-542. Insurers know the calendar better than most claimants do. Dragging negotiations close to that deadline or making litigation look financially unattractive can neutralise the one real piece of leverage a claimant holds. Once the right to sue expires, the insurer's negotiating position changes entirely.
The early lowball offer
Often deployed before treatment is complete and before the full extent of damages is known. Medical bills are outstanding, income may be disrupted, and the pressure to resolve is real. The insurer's first offer is calibrated to that pressure, not to the actual value of the claim.
National data confirms how routine this is. According to a 2024 analysis of NAIC data by ValuePenguin, claim handling accounted for 65.2% of all closed insurance complaints that year: delays specifically at 22.2%, unsatisfactory settlements at 12.2%. Auto insurance generated nearly 29,734 complaints in 2024, up 31.6% from 2021. These are not isolated incidents. They are a consistent pattern.
What the Law Says And Where It Varies
The legal response to insurer delay varies dramatically by state, and three illustrate the spectrum.
Arizona operates on two layers. A.R.S. § 20-461 prohibits insurers from failing to pursue prompt, fair settlements when liability is clear, but the statute creates no private right of action. Enforcement sits with the Arizona Department of Insurance, not individual claimants. The common law tort fills that gap. Under Zilisch v. State Farm (Ariz. 2000), an insurer cannot "lowball or delay claims hoping the insured will settle for less" and must conduct an adequate investigation and act promptly on legitimate claims. Evidence in that case revealed adjusters were being rewarded or penalised based on payout records — systemic conduct, not individual error. Remedies can include policy benefits, consequential damages, and punitive damages where conduct is egregious.
Texas goes furthest. The Prompt Payment Act (Chapter 542) sets hard deadlines: acknowledge within 15 days, decide within 15 business days of receiving documentation, pay within five days of acceptance. Miss any deadline on a valid claim, and the insurer automatically owes 18% annual interest, no bad faith proof required. Chapter 541 adds treble damages and attorney's fees for knowing violations. Texas has made delays financially costly in a way that Arizona currently has not.
California has a deep first-party bad faith doctrine, but for third-party claims, where an accident victim pursues the at-fault driver's insurer directly, no direct bad faith cause of action exists. That's a meaningful gap in the most common auto accident scenario. New York and Virginia go further still, limiting claimants to contract damages with no private bad faith remedy at all.
Where an accident happens can determine whether meaningful recourse is practically available. That fact tends to surprise claimants more than practitioners.
Where the Law Falls Short in Practice
The legal frameworks above exist. Accessing them is another matter.
The "fairly debatable" defence
In most states that recognise bad faith, an insurer with a plausible factual argument for disputing claim value has some insulation from liability. Proving that an insurer crossed from legitimate dispute into unreasonable conduct typically requires internal documents, claims manuals, adjuster performance criteria, and bonus structures that are only obtainable through litigation discovery. As attorneys at Esquire Law have observed handling motor vehicle claims in Arizona, by the time that evidence is available, the claimant has already absorbed the full weight of the delay the bad faith doctrine is meant to deter. The remedy arrives after the harm.
The cost-risk asymmetry
Bad faith litigation is expensive and slow. For insurers, legal costs are a budgeted business expense. For an individual claimant managing outstanding medical bills and lost income, taking on multi-year litigation against a well-resourced defendant is a fundamentally different calculation. Bad faith claims tend to be viable — and are most commonly pursued — in serious injury cases where damages are large enough to justify the fight. For moderate claims, which represent the bulk of auto accident cases across the country, the remedy exists on paper but is rarely used in practice.
The regulatory-only enforcement gap
Even in states with unfair claims settlement statutes, including Arizona's A.R.S. § 20-461 and similar provisions in other jurisdictions, many of those laws vest enforcement authority exclusively in state insurance regulators, not individual claimants. A regulator can sanction an insurer for a pattern of bad conduct. That outcome doesn't produce a personal recovery for the specific claimant who waited. They still have to pursue a separate private action, which circles back to the cost-risk problem above.
Taken together, these three barriers mean the gap between what bad faith law permits and what an unrepresented claimant can realistically access remains wide, regardless of which state the accident happened in.
What This Means for Claimants and Practitioners
None of this means bad faith doctrine is toothless. In Arizona, Zilisch remains an important standard. In Texas, the Prompt Payment Act creates real consequences for insurers who delay without justification. The law, where it exists, has substance.
But the gap between what the law permits and what an unrepresented claimant can realistically access is wide. The float-driven incentive to delay is structural and industry-wide. The legal deterrents are meaningful primarily when claimants have representation that can deploy them, which is to say, when delay has already forced a claimant into adversarial proceedings they were trying to avoid.
For practitioners advising injured clients, the practical takeaway is documentation from the earliest stage: dates of every communication with the insurer, every request for additional information, every extension of the investigation period. That paper trail is what makes the difference between a delay that is frustrating and one that is legally actionable.