Common Reasons Claims Get Delayed (And How We Prevent Them)

You filed your claim weeks ago. Maybe even months ago. You keep calling, and they keep saying “we’re still looking at it” or “we need more time.” Your bills are piling up, and you’re wondering what’s taking so long.

I’ve seen this happen hundreds of times, and I know how hard it makes life. Let me explain what’s really happening and how we help people get past these delays.

Why Your Claim Is Taking So Long

What Claim Delays Really Mean for You

When your claim gets delayed, it’s not just annoying. It hits your wallet hard. You might have medical bills you can’t pay. You might have missed work and lost money. Your car might still be broken. Your home might still have damage. Every day that passes makes things worse.

Insurance companies know this. They know you’re under pressure. They know you need money now. And sometimes, they use that against you. Not always on purpose, but the result is the same – you wait while they take their time.

I talked to a woman last month who waited four months for her car accident claim. She couldn’t afford to fix her car, so she was taking the bus to work. She was spending two extra hours every day just traveling. When I asked the insurance adjuster what was taking so long, they said they were “still reviewing.” But there was nothing left to review. They were just slow.

The True Cost of Waiting

The longer you wait, the more money you might lose. Here’s what happens when claims get delayed:

Your medical treatment might stop because you can’t pay for it. This can make your injury worse. Doctors might not want to keep seeing you if the bills aren’t getting paid. You might have to use your own savings or credit cards. Some people go into debt waiting for their money.

Your evidence might disappear. Witnesses forget things. Photos get lost. Medical records pile up and get harder to organize. The longer you wait, the weaker your case can become.

According to a study published by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, delayed settlements often result in claimants accepting 15-30% less than what their claims were actually worth, simply due to financial pressure and the emotional toll of waiting. Your stress gets worse. I’ve seen people get sick from the worry. They can’t sleep. They fight with their family. They feel helpless. This isn’t right, but it happens every day.

Incomplete or Missing Documentation

What Documents You Actually Need

This is the number one reason claims get delayed. The insurance company says they don’t have what they need. Sometimes they’re right. Sometimes they’re making excuses.

Here’s what you usually need for most claims: a police report if there was an accident, photos of the damage, medical records from your doctor, medical bills with the costs, proof of your lost wages from work, and witness statements if anyone saw what happened.

For medical claims, you also need treatment notes, prescriptions, referral letters, and sometimes test results like X-rays or MRI scans. For property damage, you need repair estimates, receipts for anything you fixed yourself, and proof of what things cost before they got damaged.

The insurance adjuster might ask for your old medical records, too. They want to see if you have any pre-existing problems. This feels like they’re snooping, but it’s normal. Just make sure they only get records that relate to your current injury.

I had a client who thought he sent everything. But when we looked, he sent photos of his car but forgot the estimate from the repair shop. That one missing paper held up his whole claim for six weeks. Once we sent it, they processed everything in three days.

How to Keep Your Paperwork Organized

Start a folder the day you file your claim. Put everything in it. Every paper, every email, every receipt. Write down every phone call you make. Write the date, who you talked to, and what they said.

Take photos of everything with your phone. Your injury, the damage, the accident scene. Even if it seems like too much, take it anyway. You can always delete photos later, but you can’t go back in time to take new ones.

Make copies of everything before you send it to the insurance company. Keep the copies in your folder. This way, when they say “we never got that,” you can prove you sent it.

I use a simple system with my clients. We make a checklist of every document they need. We check it off as we collect each one. Then we send everything in one big package with a letter listing what’s inside. This way, the insurance company can’t say they’re missing something when we can prove we sent it.

Insurance Company Delay Tactics

Requesting the Same Papers Over and Over

This drives people crazy. You send your medical bills, and two weeks later, they ask for them again. You send your photos, and a month later,r they say they need photos. You know you sent them. They know you sent them. But they ask anyway.

Sometimes this happens because different people in the insurance company don’t talk to each other. Your papers are in the system, but the person calling you doesn’t know how to find them. Sometimes it happens because they lost your papers. And sometimes, honestly, they’re just trying to make you give up.

According to research from the Consumer Federation of America, repetitive documentation requests are among the top three complaints filed against insurance companies, with policyholders reporting an average of 3-5 requests for the same documents in delayed claims (source: https://consumerfed.org/).

I’ve seen insurance companies ask for the same medical record four or five times. Each time, my client has to call the doctor’s office, pay for another copy, and wait for them to send it. This wastes time and money. And the insurance company knows it.

The best defense is keeping good records. When they ask for something you already sent, you can sayy “I sent that on March 15th. Here’s a copy of my email showing I sent it. Do you need me to send it again?” Usually, they’ll find it after that.

Moving Your Claim Between Different People

You finally get comfortable talking to one adjuster. You explain your whole story. They understand your situation. Then suddenly, you get a call from someone new. A different adjuster. And you have to start over from the beginning.

This happens all the time. Insurance companies move claims around between adjusters for lots of reasons. Someone quits. Someone goes on vacation. They reorganize their teams. Each time, your claim goes to the back of someone else’s pile.

Every new adjuster needs time to read your file. They need time to understand what happened. Meanwhile, weeks go by, and nothing moves forward. I’ve seen claims get passed between three or four different people before anyone actually makes a decision.

This is one reason why having a lawyer helps. When I call, I don’t let them restart the whole process. I already know the case. I can remind them where we left off. I can push them to make a decision instead of just “reviewing” forever.

Waiting for Medical Treatment to Finish Why Doctors Want You at Maximum Medical Improvement

Waiting for Medical Treatment to Finish

Why Doctors Want You at Maximum Medical Improvement

If you’re still seeing doctors, the insurance company will wait to settle your claim. They want to see how much your treatment costs in total. They want to know if you’ll get better or if you’ll have problems forever.

Doctors call this maximum medical improvement or MMI. It means you’ve healed as much as you’re going to heal. Maybe you’re 100% better. Maybe you’re only 80% better and will always have some pain. But either way, the doctors know what your future looks like.

If you settle before you reach MMI, you might miss out on money. Let’s say you settle for $10,000, but then you need surgery that costs $15,000. Too bad. You already settled. You can’t go back and ask for more.

I remember a guy who hurt his back in a car accident. He felt better after two months, so he wanted to settle fast. But his doctor said, Let’ss wait and see.” Good thing we waited. Three months later, his back got worse. He needed physical therapy for six more months. If he had settled early, he would have been stuck paying for all that himself.

The Danger of Settling Too Early

Insurance companies love it when people settle too soon. They’ll offer you money before you finish treatment. They’ll say, Takee this now, and we can close this out.” It sounds tempting when you need money.

But if you say yes, you’re done. You can’t change your mind later. If your injury turns out to be worse than you thought, you’re on your own. If you need more medical treatment, you pay for it yourself.

According to the American Bar Association, individuals who settle personal injury claims without legal help before completing medical treatment receive 32% less compensation on average compared to those who wait until MMI.

Young people especially need to be careful. A back injury might seem small now, but it could bother you for the next 40 years. If you settle for $5,000 now, that won’t help much when you need treatment for decades.

The smart move is waiting until your doctor says you’re done. Yes, it takes longer. Yes, it’s frustrating. But it protects you from getting stuck with bills you can’t pay later.

Disagreements About Who Was at Fault

When Both Sides Blame Each Other

Sometimes claims get delayed because nobody agrees on who caused the accident. You say they hit you. They say you hit them. The insurance companies on both sides argue about it. Meanwhile, you’re stuck waiting.

This happens a lot at intersections. One person says the light was green. The other person says no, their light was green. Without a witness or a camera, it’s hard to prove who’s right.

Insurance companies use these disagreements as an excuse to delay. They say “we’re still investigating who was at fault.” They ask for more evidence. They talk to witnesses. They look at police reports. All of this takes time.

In some states, even if you were partly at fault, you can still get money. But the insurance company has to figure out what percentage was your fault. This makes things even more complicated. They might say “you were 40% at fault,” and that reduces how much they pay you.

I worked on a case where two cars hit each other in a parking lot. Both drivers were backing up at the same time. Neither one saw the other. The insurance companies argued for five months about who should pay. Finally, they agreed to split it 50/50. But my client lost five months of her life to that argument.

Gathering Evidence That Proves Your Case

The best way to avoid fault arguments isto haveg good evidence from the start. Photos help. Videos help even more. Witness names and phone numbers are gold.

If the police report, get the police report. It usually says who the officer thinks was at fault. Insurance companies pay attention to what the police say. If the police report is on your side, it’s much harder for them to blame you.

Dash cameras are becoming more popular. If you have video of the accident, that ends most arguments. The insurance company can’t say you’re lying when they can watch what happened.

Sometimes you need expert help. An accident reconstruction expert can look at the damage and figure out how the accident happened. They use physics and measurements to prove who was at fault. This costs money, but it might be worth it if the insurance company won’t listen otherwise.

The sooner you collect this evidence, the better. Memories fade. Witnesses move away. Security camera footage gets erased after a few weeks. Don’t wait. Get everything you can as fast as you can.

Problems with Insurance Systems and Staff

Not Enough Workers to Handle Claims

A lot of insurance companies are understaffed right now. They don’t have enough adjusters to handle all their claims. This means each adjuster has too many cases. They’re overwhelmed. They can’t keep up.

When an adjuster has 100 claims on their desk, yours isn’t getting much attention. They might look at it once a week. Or once a month. Meanwhile, you’re calling and emailing and getting nowhere.

According to a report from the Insurance Information Institute, the average claims adjuster workload increased by 47% between 2020 and 2024, while staffing levels remained largely unchanged, resulting in significant delays in claims processing across the industry.

This got worse after hurricanes and other big disasters. Suddenly, thousands of people all file claims at once. The insurance company can’t hire new adjusters fast enough. Even good adjusters who want to help you can’t because they’re drowning in work.

I’ve talked to adjusters who apologize for how slow things are. They know it’s not fair to you. But they’re just one person trying to do the job of three people. The insurance company should hire more help, but that costs money, so they don’t.

Old Computer Systems That Don’t Talk to Each Other

Many insurance companies use old technology. Their computers don’t work well together. One system holds your personal information. Another system holds your medical records. A third system processes payments. They don’t share information automatically.

This means the adjuster has to look in three different places to see your whole case. Sometimes information gets entered incorrectly. Sometimes it gets lost. Sometimes they just can’t find it, even though it’s in there somewhere.

I’ve seen claims get delayed because the adjuster couldn’t access the photos. The photos were uploaded to the system, but the adjuster‘s computer couldn’t open them. It took them two weeks to figure out the problem and fix it.

Newer insurance companies have better technology. Everything is in one place. The whole team can see everything. Updates happen automatically. But older, bigger insurance companies sometimes still use systems from 20 or 30 years ago.

When you’re dealing with system problems, patience helps. But also, stay on top of things. Call regularly. Ask if they can see your information. Sometimes just asking makes them work harder to find it.

How We Prevent These Delays Our System for Fast Document Collection

How We Prevent These Delays

Our System for Fast Document Collection

We’ve learned from years of handling claims. We know exactly what documentation the insurance company will ask for. We collect it all up front, before they even ask.

When you work with us, we give you a checklist on day one. It lists every paper, photo, and record we need. We help you get everything organized. We request medical records from your doctors. We get police reports. We gather witness statements.

Then we send it all to the insurance company in one complete package. We include a detailed letter explaining what happened and why you deserve compensation. We attach every piece of evidence. We make it easy for them to say yes.

This stops the back-and-forth of “we need this” and “we need that.” They already have everything. If they ask for more, we can point to our original package and show them we already sent it.

We also keep copies of everything in a secure system. If something gets lost, we can resend it immediately. We don’t have to wait for you to dig through your papers or call the doctor again.

We Deal with Insurance Companies, So You Don’t Have To

Once we take your case, you don’t have to talk to the insurance company anymore. We handle all the phone calls, emails, and letters. This takes a huge weight off your shoulders.

Insurance adjusters change their tone when they’re talking to a lawyer. They know we understand the rules. They know we won’t accept their excuses. They know if they delay too long, we’ll take action.

We call them regularly. We don’t let your claim sit on their desk getting dusty. We push for updates. We set deadlines. We make it clear we’re not going away.

If they try the usual delay tactics – asking for papers we already sent, moving your case between adjusters, dragging out their “investigation” – we call them out on it. We keep detailed records of every interaction. If they cross the line into bad faith, we’re ready to hold them accountable.

We’ve built relationships with many insurance companies over the years. Sometimes, just having us on the case makes things move faster. They know we’re serious. They know we’ll fight if we have to. Often, they’d rather just handle the claim fairly and move on.

Conclusion

Claims get delayed for many reasons. Sometimes it’s missing paperwork. Sometimes it’s insurance company games. Sometimes it’s just too many claims and not enough workers. Whatever the reason, these delays hurt real people who need help now.

You don’t have to face this alone. We know how the system works. We know what insurance companies will try. Most importantly, we know how to get results when you’re stuck waiting.

If your claim has been delayed for weeks or months, don’t give up. There are things we can do to push it forward. The sooner you get help, the sooner you can get the compensation you deserve and move on with your life.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a claim take?

Most simple claims should close in 30 to 60 days if you have all your documentation ready. More complicated claims with serious injuries or liability disputes might take 3 to 6 months or longer. If your claim is taking longer than this without a good reason, something is wrong.

Can I speed up my claim myself?

Yes, sometimes. Make sure you’ve sent all the documentation they asked for. Call every week to check on progress. Be polite but firm. Ask specific questions like Whatt are you waiting for?” and “When will you make a decision?” Keep records of every conversation. If this doesn’t work, you might need help from a lawyer.

What if the insurance company stops responding?

This is a red flag. Insurance companies have a legal duty to respond to you in a reasonable time. If they’re ignoring your calls and emails, they might be acting in bad faith. Start documenting every time you try to contact them. Send a certified letter demanding a response. If they still don’t respond, talk to a lawyer right away. You might have a bad-faith case.

Will hiring a lawyer make things take longer?

Usually no. Most of the time, having a lawyer actually speeds things up. Insurance companies know they can’t play games with lawyers the way they can with people who don’t know the rules. We put pressure on them to move faster. Yes, sometimes we need time to investigate and build a strong case, but this usually leads to a better result than settling fast for less money.

What can I do if I’ve been waiting for months?

First, find out exactly what’s causing the delay. Is it missing paperwork? Are they still investigating? Are they just slow? Once you know the problem, you can fix it. If you’ve done everything right and they’re still stalling, contact a lawyer for a free consultation. There might be legal action you can take to force them to act. Don’t just keep waiting and hoping – take action.

 

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