Public Adjuster Versus Insurance Company Adjuster — the Practical Differences
When you file an insurance claim, your carrier assigns one of two types of adjuster: a staff adjuster (employee of the insurance company) or an independent adjuster (contracted by the carrier for that specific claim). Either way, they work for the carrier. Their job is to investigate the claim, scope the damage, and settle for an amount that is defensible to the carrier — meaning they will not overpay relative to the carrier's own scope and pricing methodology.
A public adjuster is the third type of adjuster — and the only type licensed to represent the policyholder. We are state-licensed, bonded, and bound by fiduciary duty to the policyholder. Our scope is your scope; our pricing is your pricing; our policy invocation strategy is built around what produces the maximum recovery for you within the policy limits.
The practical effect: where the carrier-assigned adjuster shows up with a scope that captures roughly 60-75% of the actual loss, we show up with one that captures 95-100%. Where the carrier-assigned adjuster uses database pricing 15-30% below local market rates, we use actual local market pricing. Where the carrier-assigned adjuster overlooks endorsements and additional coverages, we invoke every provision your policy includes. The settlement differential typically runs 20-80% above what the carrier-assigned adjuster initially offers.