If your insurance claim is dragging on, you have options: stay organized, follow up in writing, ask for the specific reason for the delay, and escalate to your state regulator if it stalls. Persistence and a clear paper trail are your strongest tools.
Key takeaways
- Insurers are generally expected to act within reasonable timeframes set by state rules.
- Keep a detailed record of every call and document.
- Ask in writing for the specific reason and what the insurer still needs.
- Escalate inside the company to a supervisor or formal complaint process.
- If that fails, your state department of insurance can require a response.
Know what counts as a delay
Claims naturally take some time. Investigations, inspections, and paperwork all add days. So not every wait is a problem.
What is a problem is a claim with no movement and no explanation. Insurers are generally expected to act within reasonable timeframes set by state rules. A claim that simply sits, with no updates and no clear reason, may be unreasonably delayed.
Keep a detailed record
A clear timeline is your most valuable asset if you need to escalate. From the start:
- Log every call — the date, the time, and who you spoke with.
- Note what was said and any promises about next steps.
- Save all correspondence, including letters, emails, and forms.
If you ever file a complaint, this record turns "they keep stalling" into a documented, dated sequence the insurer must answer for.
Ask for the reason in writing
Vague delays often have a single, fixable cause. So put a direct question to the insurer in writing:
- What is the specific reason for the holdup?
- What exactly do you still need from me to move forward?
Frequently the answer is one missing document or signature you can supply right away. Asking in writing also creates a record of when you requested an explanation.
Escalate within the company
If the adjuster is unresponsive, move up the chain before going outside the company:
| Step | What to do |
|---|---|
| Reach a supervisor | Ask to speak with the adjuster's manager |
| Use the formal process | File through the insurer's complaint or appeal channel |
| Put it in writing | State your concerns and the timeline in a written message |
Many delays resolve once a supervisor or formal process is involved and your concerns are on the record.
Involve your state department of insurance
When internal steps fail, your state regulator is the next move. The state department of insurance:
- Accepts complaints from consumers.
- Can require the insurer to respond and explain.
- Enforces the timeliness rules insurers are expected to follow.
Filing a complaint is free and often prompts a stalled claim back into motion. For an unreasonable delay, contact your state department of insurance.
Frequently asked questions
How long can an insurance company take to pay a claim?
Timeframes are generally set by state rules and depend on the type of claim. A claim still being actively worked is normal; a claim with no movement and no explanation may be unreasonably delayed.
What should I do first when a claim stalls?
Ask the insurer in writing for the specific reason for the delay and a list of anything it still needs from you. Often a single missing document is holding everything up.
When should I contact my state regulator?
When internal follow-ups and the insurer's complaint process have not worked. Your state department of insurance can require the insurer to respond and enforces timeliness rules.
This guide is general education, not insurance advice. Confirm specifics with a licensed agent or your state department of insurance.
- NAIC — Claim handling and delays — Official Guidance · retrieved May 31, 2026