A claim succeeds or fails on what you put in writing. Adjusters process hundreds of claims; a vague, incomplete letter is easy to discount, while a precise one that names the right rules and demands a specific sum is hard to ignore. These templates exist to make sure your claim says the right things, in the right order, every time — without paying a lawyer to draft a one-page letter.
The template catalog
Each template targets a specific moment in the claims process. Most people use two or three over the life of a claim: the initial demand, an escalation if it stalls, and a rebuttal if it is denied. Here is the full set and when to reach for each.
| Template | Use it when | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Damage Claim Letter | To file your formal written claim and start the 9-month clock | Free |
| Item Valuation Worksheet | To build a defensible dollar figure for every damaged item | Free |
| FMCSA Complaint Kit | The carrier ignores or denies a valid claim | $19 |
| Hostage Load Demand | The mover withholds your goods for unlawful charges | $29 |
| Claim Denial Rebuttal | You received a denial or a lowball offer | $24 |
| Full Recovery Bundle | You want every paid template plus filled-in examples | $49 |
Start free. The Damage Claim Letter and Item Valuation Worksheet cost nothing and handle the majority of straightforward claims. Buy a premium template only when your situation calls for escalation, a hostage demand, or a denial rebuttal.
Anatomy of a winning claim letter
Whether you use our template or write your own, a persuasive claim letter contains the same building blocks. Miss one and you give the adjuster a reason to delay.
- Identification. Your name, the carrier's name, and the shipment or bill-of-lading number so the file can be pulled instantly.
- The facts. Pickup and delivery dates, and a short, neutral account of what went wrong.
- The itemized claim. Every damaged, lost, or destroyed article, each with the amount claimed and a basis for that number.
- The total demand. One clear figure you are asking the carrier to pay.
- The legal hook. A reference to your coverage level and the carrier's duty to acknowledge within 30 days and resolve within 120 days.
- The evidence. Copies (never originals) of photos, receipts, the inventory, and the bill of lading.
- A response deadline. A polite but firm date by which you expect acknowledgment.
The tone matters too. Stay factual and unemotional. You are not venting; you are building a record that will read well to an adjuster today and, if it comes to it, to an arbitrator or judge later.
Which templates do you need?
Answer four quick questions and we will map your situation to the right documents.
The Damage Claim Letter (free)
This is the document that starts everything. It converts your complaint into a formal, legally meaningful written claim and starts the carrier's clock. The template is structured around the seven building blocks above, with bracketed placeholders for your shipment details and an itemized table you fill in. Send it by email with a read receipt or by certified mail so you can prove the carrier received it.
For most clean, well-documented claims under a few thousand dollars, this letter plus good photos and proof of value is all it takes to get paid.
The Item Valuation Worksheet (free)
Adjusters discount numbers they cannot verify. The worksheet walks you through assigning a defensible value to each item — purchase price, age, condition, and the basis for your figure (receipt, statement, or comparable listing) — so your demand totals add up and survive scrutiny. Attach the completed worksheet to your claim letter.
The FMCSA Complaint Kit ($19)
When a carrier ignores or denies a valid claim, a federal complaint changes the dynamic. The kit explains exactly what information to gather (carrier name, USDOT number, dates, claim history), how to file with the National Consumer Complaint Database, and includes a ready-to-adapt complaint narrative that states the facts cleanly and references the rules the carrier violated. A complaint number on the carrier's federal record is real pressure — and free to file once you have the kit.
The Hostage Load Demand ($29)
If a mover is holding your belongings for charges beyond your binding estimate, this forceful demand letter cites the specific federal rules being broken and sets a deadline for release. It is written to be firm and unambiguous, and it pairs naturally with an immediate FMCSA complaint. Because hostage cases move fast and involve real money, this template is built to escalate quickly.
The Claim Denial Rebuttal ($24)
A denial or lowball is an opening position, not the end. The rebuttal template helps you answer point by point: it restates your evidence, addresses the carrier's stated reasons, cites their obligations, and re-demands payment with a clear deadline and a statement of your next step (FMCSA complaint, arbitration, or court). Most successful recoveries on denied claims come from a well-argued rebuttal, not a lawsuit.
The Full Recovery Bundle ($49)
The bundle is every paid template — the FMCSA kit, hostage demand, and denial rebuttal — plus a fully filled-in example of each so you can see exactly how a strong submission reads. It is the most economical option if your claim is contested and you expect to need more than one escalation.
How to fill in and send your templates
- Replace every bracket. Bracketed text marks where your details go. Do not leave placeholders in the final letter.
- Delete what does not apply. These are starting points; trim sections that are not relevant to your move.
- Attach copies, keep originals. Never mail original receipts or the only copy of your inventory.
- Send provably. Email with delivery/read receipts, or certified mail with return receipt, so you can show the carrier received it.
- Keep a file. Save a copy of everything you send and every reply, in date order.
| Stage | What you send | Template |
|---|---|---|
| 1. File | Formal written claim + valuation | Damage Claim Letter + Worksheet (free) |
| 2. Carrier stalls | Federal complaint | FMCSA Complaint Kit |
| 3. Carrier denies / lowballs | Point-by-point rebuttal | Claim Denial Rebuttal |
| 4. Goods withheld | Demand for release | Hostage Load Demand |
Templates do not guarantee a result — your coverage and evidence drive the outcome — but they remove the single biggest reason good claims fail: saying the wrong thing, or leaving the right thing out. Start with the free letter, keep your file tidy, and escalate with the matching template the moment the carrier gives you a reason to.
