Diminished value claims in Utah
If your car was repaired after a crash someone else caused, it's now worth less on paper simply because it has an accident on its record. In Utah, that lost value — “diminished value” — can generally be pursued. Here's how Utah treats it.
Utah at a glance
- Third-party DV (at-fault driver's insurer)
- Yes
- First-party DV (your own insurer)
- No
- How DV is measured
- Market comparison (before-vs-after value)
- Time limit to file (statute of limitations)
- 4 years
You can generally pursue the lost resale value from the at-fault driver's insurer.
Like most states, your own policy generally doesn't cover diminished value.
Measured from the accident date, not the repair date.
Diminished value in Utah
Utah is NOT a strong first-party DV state on .gov sources — no Utah Supreme Court case clearly establishes a first-party DV duty under standard auto policies, and Title 31A / R590-190 do not address DV. Third-party DV (against the at-fault driver) is recoverable as the standard tort property-damage measure: pre-loss FMV minus post-repair FMV (Market Comparison Approach).
How Moe handles diminished value in Utah
Knowing the rule is one thing — applying it against a carrier is another. Moe builds your case to Utah’s rules, drafts every letter for your approval, tracks the deadlines, and only pings you when there’s a decision to make.
Utah diminished value — common questions
- Can I file a diminished value claim in Utah?
- Generally yes — if another driver was at fault, Utah typically lets you pursue diminished value (the resale value your car lost just from having an accident on its record) against that driver's insurer. Diminished value applies to a repaired car, not a totaled one.
- Can I recover diminished value from my own insurer in Utah?
- Usually not. In Utah, as in most states, your own auto policy generally doesn't cover diminished value — it's typically pursued against the at-fault driver's insurer instead.
- How long do I have to file a diminished value claim in Utah?
- In Utah the statute of limitations is generally 4 years, and the clock usually starts on the accident date — not when the car was repaired. Waiting too long can permanently bar the claim.
Learn more
Sources
This page summarizes Utah’s car-accident claim rules for general information — it is not legal advice, and the rules can change. What applies to your claim depends on your policy and the specific facts.