In North Carolina, you can only force an appraisal if your own auto policy has an appraisal clause that applies to the disputed “amount of loss.” That clause binds you and your insurer—not the at-fault driver’s insurer. Appraisal decides value, not coverage or fault, and you must follow the policy’s steps and timelines. If no applicable clause exists (or this is a third‑party claim), your options are negotiation, mediation, or filing a lawsuit.
You’re asking whether, in North Carolina, you can require a neutral appraiser to set the value of diminished value when you and the insurer can’t agree. You are the claimant, you want the insurer to use a neutral, and the trigger is a disagreement over a diminished value figure after your independent appraisal came in higher than the insurer’s offer.
Under North Carolina law, an appraisal is a contract right. Most auto policies allow either party to demand appraisal when the dispute is the amount of loss (how much), not whether the policy covers diminished value at all (coverage). Appraisal typically works this way: each side picks an appraiser; those appraisers try to agree; if they cannot, they select an umpire who issues a binding valuation on amount. That process only applies to first‑party claims under your policy. It does not bind a third‑party insurer for the at‑fault driver because you are not a party to that contract. If you file suit, North Carolina courts commonly require mediation; arbitration is generally non‑binding unless both sides agree in writing to make it binding.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: You already obtained an independent appraisal above the insurer’s offer. If this is a first‑party claim under your auto policy and your policy covers diminished value or allows appraisal on “amount of loss,” you can demand appraisal in writing and follow the clause’s steps. If you are pursuing only a third‑party claim against the at‑fault driver’s insurer, you cannot force their policy’s appraisal; your choices are continue negotiating, mediate, or sue.
In North Carolina, you can only compel a neutral valuation through appraisal if your own auto policy has an appraisal clause that applies to a dispute about the amount of diminished value. That clause binds only you and your insurer and sets the process and deadlines. It does not apply to a third‑party insurer. Next step: review your policy now and, if the clause applies, send a written appraisal demand to your insurer following the policy’s notice requirements.
If you're dealing with a diminished value dispute and want to know whether appraisal, mediation, or litigation makes sense, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.