Progressive total-loss settlements in Wyoming: how to negotiate a fair offer
If Progressive just totaled your vehicle in Wyoming, their initial valuation is almost certainly negotiable. Here is the state-specific playbook — combining Wyoming's statutory rights with everything we know about how Progressive builds a Mitchell WorkCenter valuation.
Wyoming key takeaway
Wyoming's § 26-15-124 attorney-fee-and-10%-interest remedy gives a Wyoming claimant a direct statutory tool when an insurer "refuses to pay the full amount of a loss covered by the policy" and the refusal is "unreasonable or without cause" — which is exactly what an undocumented "typical-negotiation" or "condition" deduction inside an Audatex/CCC report tends to be.
Bottom line
Progressive's Wyoming adjusters generate offers from Mitchell WorkCenter, which has well-documented patterns of understating local market value. Wyoming's statutory total-loss threshold is Total Loss Formula (TLF), and your policy almost certainly contains an appraisal clause that lets you demand a binding independent appraisal when the offer is too low. Decode every line of the Mitchell adjustment table, verify their condition score against the actual photos in your dashboard, and present an alternate valuation grounded in dealer asking prices (not auction or wholesale).
How Progressive settles total losses in Wyoming
Progressive writes ~13.7% of US auto policies, and their total-loss claims process is broadly the same from state to state. What changes in Wyoming is the legal backdrop:
- Total-loss threshold: Total Loss Formula (TLF). Once cost-of-repair (plus salvage value, in TLF states) crosses that threshold, Progressive is required to declare a total loss instead of authorizing repair.
- Appraiser-licensing rules: Wyoming does not impose a special licensing requirement on the independent appraiser you retain under your policy's appraisal clause.
- Appraisal-clause availability: Standard auto policies in Wyoming — including Progressive's — contain an appraisal clause. That gives you the contractual right to demand a binding independent appraisal when Progressive and you can't agree on the vehicle's actual cash value.
Common Progressive valuation patterns to watch for
- Mitchell-driven adjustments that exceed industry condition rubrics
- Excluding higher-priced comparables as 'outliers'
- Reluctance to revisit valuations after first counter
- Slow response times that pressure claimants into accepting
In Wyoming markets specifically, we frequently see comparable vehicles pulled from outside the local trade radius, condition adjustments applied without supporting photographs, and mileage curves that don't reflect the Wyoming retail reality. Each of those is a documented attack surface.
The Progressive Wyoming negotiation playbook
- Request the full Mitchell WorkCenter report from Progressive in writing — not just the summary letter.
- Verify mileage, condition, equipment, and (for some carriers) the typical-negotiation discount line-by-line against the published Mitchell WorkCenter methodology.
- Pull current dealer listings within 50-100 miles of your Wyoming zip code for vehicles that match your year/make/model/trim.
- Build a documented counter-valuation that lists every error and cites every supporting comparable.
- Send the counter to your Progressive adjuster in writing with a 5-7 business-day response deadline.
- If they don't move materially, escalate to a supervisor and demand itemized justification for every adjustment.
- Invoke the appraisal clause in writing if the supervisor's response is still inadequate. Wyoming explicitly recognizes your right to retain an independent appraiser.
Your Wyoming rights at a glance
45-day prompt-payment rule for property and casualty claims
Wyo. Stat. § 26-15-124(b) requires that claims under a property or casualty insurance policy be rejected or accepted and paid within 45 days after receipt of the claim and supporting bills. A claim that drags past 45 days without a written acceptance, rejection, or documented investigation is the kind of unreasonable delay § 26-13-124(a)(v) treats as an unfair practice.
Attorney-fee-and-interest remedy when refusal is unreasonable
Under Wyo. Stat. § 26-15-124(c), if a court determines an insurer refused to pay the full amount of a covered loss and the refusal was 'unreasonable or without cause,' the court may award reasonable attorney fees plus 10% annual interest. The math on this remedy makes it expensive for insurers to maintain low offers without documentation.
Statutory right to an independent appraiser without state licensing
Wyoming does not require a separate license for the policyholder's appraiser invoked under the policy's appraisal clause, so you can retain SecondAppraisal directly without needing a state-licensed intermediary.
Wyoming statutory framework
Wyoming Total Loss Framework — § 26-13-124, § 26-15-124, § 31-2-106(v)
Wyoming's first-party total-loss framework rests on Wyo. Stat. § 26-13-124 (the Unfair Claims Settlement Practices statute, with 17 prohibited practices) and Wyo. Stat. § 26-15-124 (the 45-day prompt-payment rule and attorney-fee remedy). Although Herrig v. Herrig, 844 P.2d 487 (Wyo. 1992), held that § 26-13-124 by itself doesn't create a private cause of action, the Wyoming Supreme Court has recognized first-party bad faith as an independent tort, and § 26-15-124 supplies a direct statutory remedy: a claimant who succeeds against an insurer that refuses to pay "the full amount of a loss covered by the policy" when the refusal is "unreasonable or without cause" can recover reasonable attorney fees plus 10% annual interest. Wyoming uses a 75%-of-retail-cash-value threshold under § 31-2-106(v) to define a salvage vehicle, with the threshold also applying when no insurance settlement is involved. Wyoming does not require a separate license for your appraiser, so SecondAppraisal can serve directly as your independent appraiser under the policy's appraisal clause.
Source: law.justia.com ↗ · As of Apr 29, 2026 · Excerpt — full statute at official source.
Bad-faith escalation: File a complaint with Wyoming Department of Insurance — Consumer Affairs at 307-777-7402 — file online ↗.
Frequently asked questions
Is Progressive's total-loss offer negotiable in Wyoming?▼
What is the Wyoming total-loss threshold for Progressive claims?▼
Can I invoke the appraisal clause against Progressive in Wyoming?▼
What does Progressive's Mitchell WorkCenter report look like for a Wyoming claim?▼
How long does a Progressive total-loss negotiation take in Wyoming?▼
What does SecondAppraisal cost for a Progressive Wyoming claim?▼
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