Get the fair value you deserve for your totaled vehicle in Illinois
In Illinois, your auto policy's appraisal clause gives you the right to retain SecondAppraisal as your independent advocate in a total-loss dispute.
Key takeaway
Illinois 215 ILCS 5/154.10, effective for policies issued or renewed on or after July 1, 2025, is the new lever: insurers must now give the insured a written description of how the total-loss determination was made, including the repair estimate, salvage value, assessed market value, and the calculations used. Stack that with 50 Ill. Adm. Code § 919.80(c)(2)(F)'s 30-day Right of Recourse, and Illinois is one of the strongest jurisdictions in the country for forcing valuation transparency.
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 Illinois
Insurance carriers use the Total Loss Formula (TLF). When the cost of repair (plus salvage value, in TLF states) crosses that threshold, your insurance company 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 Illinois
Most US auto policies — including those issued in Illinois — 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 Illinois rights at a glance
Written description of total-loss determination under 215 ILCS 5/154.10
For policies issued or renewed on or after July 1, 2025, 215 ILCS 5/154.10 requires the insurer, on determination of a total loss, to provide the insured with a brief description of how that determination was made — including any available repair estimate, estimated salvage value, assessed market value, and other costs and calculations used. That gives you statutory leverage to demand the underlying math behind the total-loss declaration.
30-day Right of Recourse under 50 Ill. Adm. Code § 919.80(c)(2)(F)
If, within 30 days after receipt of the claim draft, the insured cannot purchase a comparable vehicle in excess of the offered market value, the insurer must reopen its claim file and either (i) locate a comparable vehicle, (ii) pay the difference, (iii) offer a replacement under § 919.80(c)(1), or (iv) conclude the settlement under the appraisal section of the contract, which is binding against both parties without waiving any other rights.
Sales tax, title, and transfer fees under 215 ILCS 5/154.9
For policies issued or renewed on or after July 1, 2022, 215 ILCS 5/154.9 requires the insurer to pay any state or local use/occupation tax and title/transfer fees on the replacement vehicle, or to reimburse those amounts on a cash settlement when the insured purchases or leases a replacement within 30 days and substantiates the purchase within 33 days. Leased-vehicle taxes are deemed incurred at lease inception.
Illinois Total Loss Framework — 215 ILCS 5/154.5–154.10 + 50 IAC § 919.80
Illinois has one of the most prescriptive total-loss regimes in the country, and it just got stronger. 50 Ill. Adm. Code § 919.80(c) sets a closed list of valuation methodologies (printed source published at least every 2 months covering 5 model years, electronic source covering 85% of makes/models for the last 15 years built on at least 1.5 million vehicles with metropolitan-area data, electronic comparable service requiring 2 vehicles from licensed Illinois dealers within 50 miles, or 2 written dealer quotes). The "Right of Recourse" at § 919.80(c)(2)(F) is the operational engine: if the insured cannot purchase a comparable vehicle for the offered amount within 30 days, the insurer must reopen the file and either locate a comparable, pay the difference, offer a replacement, or move to the appraisal clause. 215 ILCS 5/154.10 (effective July 1, 2025) requires the insurer to give the insured a written description of how the total-loss determination was made — repair estimate, salvage value, assessed market value, and the calculations used. Combined with 215 ILCS 5/154.6's improper-claim-practices list and 215 ILCS 5/154.9's sales-tax/title-fee mandate, Illinois law gives policyholders unusually strong documentary leverage.
Common things to look for in Illinois
Recognize these scenarios in your offer letter or comparable report — and what we do about them.
Insurer offering a settlement without the § 154.10 written description of how the total-loss determination was made
215 ILCS 5/154.10 (effective for policies issued or renewed on or after July 1, 2025) requires the insurer to provide a brief description of how the total-loss determination was made, including the repair estimate, salvage value, assessed market value, and calculations used. A bare valuation report without that description does not satisfy the statute; demand the description in writing.
Refusing to reopen the file after a 30-day Right-of-Recourse notice
50 Ill. Adm. Code § 919.80(c)(2)(F) is explicit: when the insured timely notifies the insurer that they cannot purchase a comparable vehicle in excess of the offered market value, the insurer must reopen the claim file and select among four codified options. Refusal to reopen is itself an § 919-improper-claims-practice exposure tied back to 215 ILCS 5/154.6.
Sales tax, title, and transfer fees not included on the cash settlement check
215 ILCS 5/154.9 requires those amounts to be paid on the replacement, or reimbursed within 33 days of substantiating a replacement purchase. Insurers sometimes treat the reimbursement as a separate, slow-track process; the statute makes them part of the underlying settlement obligation. Document the purchase and the substantiation timely.
Illinois Department of Insurance
If you believe your insurer is acting in bad faith, you can file a complaint with Illinois Department of Insurance — Consumer Assistance at 866-445-5364 — idoi.illinois.gov ↗.
Relevant Illinois precedent
How SecondAppraisal helps Illinois 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 Illinois?▼
Can I invoke the appraisal clause in a third-party insurance carrier / at-fault insurance carrier claim in Illinois?▼
What does SecondAppraisal cost in Illinois?▼
How long does an Illinois total-loss appraisal take?▼
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