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The complete guide

Moving damage claims: the complete guide

Everything you need to recover money after a damaged, delayed, lost, or hostage move — what to do first, how coverage works, how to value and document your loss, the deadlines that protect you, and how to escalate when a mover says no.

A bad move is one of the most stressful consumer experiences there is. Your belongings arrive broken, late, or not at all — and the company that caused it controls the paperwork, the timeline, and the first offer. The good news: federal rules give you real leverage, and most people leave money on the table simply because they do not know the process. This guide walks you through that process end to end, in plain language, so you can recover what you are actually owed.

Two quick notes before we start. First, this is educational information, not legal advice — we are not a law firm, and for large or contested claims you should consider a claims specialist or attorney. Second, the framework below applies to interstate moves (those that cross state lines), which are governed by federal regulations administered by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). Intrastate (local, same-state) moves are governed by your state's rules, which broadly mirror the federal structure but can differ on deadlines and coverage — so when in doubt, act early.

The first 72 hours: what to do immediately

What you do in the first three days after delivery has an outsized effect on what you can recover. The carrier's strongest defense is a clean delivery receipt and missing evidence, so your job in this window is to document everything and preserve your rights before they can be argued away.

Do not sign a clean delivery receipt

When the crew finishes, they will ask you to sign paperwork — typically the inventory sheet and the delivery receipt or bill of lading. If you sign that everything arrived in good condition, you hand the carrier an argument that any damage happened afterward. Before you sign, walk through your shipment and note every damaged, missing, or crushed item directly on the inventory. Write "box 47 crushed," "dresser top gouged," "TV box not delivered." If the crew is rushing you, write "items not yet inspected for concealed damage" next to your signature. You are allowed to do this; a professional mover expects it.

Photograph everything

Use your phone to take time-stamped photos and short videos. Capture wide shots that show the item in the room, then close-ups of the damage, serial numbers, and model labels. Photograph the original packing materials and boxes too — whether an item was professionally wrapped is often central to a claim. Concealed damage (damage you find only after unpacking) is still claimable, but photos taken the moment you discover it are your best evidence.

Do not throw anything away

Keep damaged items, the pieces, and the packing materials until your claim is fully resolved. The carrier has the right to inspect, and in some cases to take possession of, items they pay out on (this is called salvage). Disposing of a damaged item early is one of the most common reasons a legitimate claim gets reduced or denied.

Why the rush? The clock on your right to file a written claim starts the day your shipment is delivered. Documentation gathered in the first 72 hours is far more persuasive than anything reconstructed weeks later — and it costs you nothing but a little time.

How liability coverage works (and why it decides everything)

The single biggest factor in what you can recover is the valuation coverage you had on the move. This is not the same as insurance, and most people do not realize which one they agreed to. There are two standard levels on an interstate move.

Released value protection (the free default)

Released value is the no-cost option, and it is what you get automatically unless you elect otherwise in writing. Under it, the carrier is liable for just 60 cents per pound, per article. That figure has nothing to do with what an item is worth. A 40-pound flat-screen television is covered for $24. A 10-pound laptop worth $2,000 is covered for $6. It is, in practice, almost no protection at all for valuable, lightweight goods.

Full value protection (the paid upgrade)

Full value protection costs extra — usually a percentage of the declared value of your shipment — and it makes the mover liable for the full replacement value of anything lost or damaged. Under full value, the carrier generally gets to choose how to make you whole: repair the item, replace it with a like item, or pay the cost to do so. It is the option worth paying for if you are moving electronics, antiques, art, or anything else valuable.

Released value vs. full value protection at a glance
FeatureReleased valueFull value protection
CostFree (automatic)Extra charge, set before the move
Payout basis$0.60 per pound, per itemFull repair / replacement value
40-lb TV worth $1,200$24Up to $1,200
Who chooses remedyCarrier (pays the capped amount)Carrier (repair, replace, or pay)
Must be elected?No — it is the defaultYes — in writing, before the move
Best forLow-value, heavy goodsElectronics, antiques, art, valuables

Find your paperwork and confirm which one you had before you file — it determines your entire strategy. If the mover failed to offer you the required written choice between coverage levels, or never gave you the consumer rights booklet, that itself can strengthen your position.

Released-value calculator

See the gap between what released value pays and what your item is actually worth.

Released value pays$24
Full value pays up to$1,200
The coverage gap$1,176

Documenting your loss the right way

Strong claims win and weak claims get lowballed, and the difference is almost always documentation. Your goal is to build a file that makes it easy for the carrier — or a regulator, arbitrator, or judge — to see exactly what was damaged, what it was worth, and that the carrier caused it. Gather the following.

Keep everything in one folder (digital is fine) and never send originals — always send copies and keep the originals yourself. Use the free Evidence Checklist on our homepage to track your progress; a claim that is "100% ready" is dramatically harder to dismiss.

Valuing your claim

You cannot recover what you do not put a number on. For each damaged or missing item, establish a defensible dollar figure. The right figure depends on your coverage and the item.

Be thorough but honest. Inflated claims are easy for adjusters to spot and they poison your credibility on the items that matter. A well-supported, realistic number recovered in full beats an inflated number that gets your whole claim discounted.

Claim-value estimator

Add your damaged items to estimate your total loss and what your coverage level is likely to pay.

Total declared loss$1,200
Likely covered amount$24

Estimate only. Actual payment depends on your paperwork, proof of value, and the carrier's assessment.

Filing the written claim

A phone call is not a claim. To trigger the carrier's legal obligations you must submit a written claim. It does not need to be fancy, but it must contain three things: enough detail to identify the shipment, the specific items and amounts claimed, and a clear demand for payment of a specified sum. Send it in a way you can prove — email with a delivery receipt, or certified mail.

A complete written claim includes:

  1. Your name, the carrier's name, and the shipment or bill-of-lading number.
  2. The pickup and delivery dates.
  3. An itemized list of every damaged, lost, or destroyed article with the amount claimed for each.
  4. The total amount you are demanding.
  5. A reference to your coverage level and the carrier's obligation to acknowledge and resolve the claim.
  6. Your supporting evidence, attached as copies.

Our free Damage Claim Letter template assembles all of this for you — fill in the blanks, attach your evidence, and send.

The deadlines that protect you

Moving claims are governed by hard deadlines. Miss the filing window and you can lose the right to recover entirely, no matter how strong your case. Track these dates from the day of delivery.

Key interstate moving-claim deadlines
MilestoneDeadlineWho acts
File written claimWithin 9 months of deliveryYou
Carrier acknowledges claimWithin 30 days of receiptCarrier
Carrier pays, declines, or makes an offerWithin 120 days of receiptCarrier
File suit if neededAt least 2 years and 1 day from the carrier's disallowanceYou

If the carrier blows its own 30-day or 120-day deadline, note it — their failure to follow the process is useful leverage when you escalate. Use the free Deadline Tracker on our homepage to turn your delivery date into every date above automatically.

What happens after you file

Once your written claim lands, the carrier must acknowledge it in writing within 30 days. They will usually assign an adjuster, who may request more information, schedule an inspection, or make an offer. Within 120 days they must pay, deny, or make a firm settlement offer (or explain why more time is needed).

Expect the first offer to be low. That is normal — it is an opening position, not a verdict. Respond in writing, point to your evidence and valuation, and counter. Keep every exchange in writing so you have a paper trail. Many claims settle here, in a round or two of documented back-and-forth, without anyone escalating further.

Escalating a denied or lowballed claim

If the carrier denies a valid claim, ignores you, or refuses to move off a lowball, you have several escalation paths. They are not mutually exclusive, and signaling that you know they exist often moves a stuck claim on its own.

Escalation options compared
OptionCostBest forNotes
FMCSA complaintFreeIgnored, denied, or hostage casesGoes on the carrier's federal record; strong pressure
ArbitrationLowDisputed amounts under program limitsCarriers must offer a neutral arbitration program
Small claims courtLow filing feeClaims within your state's small-claims capNo lawyer required; you present your file yourself
Claims consultantFlat or contingencyMid-size, documented claimsFaster, cheaper than an attorney for standard disputes
AttorneyContingency or hourlyLarge losses, bad-faith denialsCan file suit or formal arbitration

The FMCSA complaint is the most common first escalation because it is free, fast, and lands on the carrier's federal record through the National Consumer Complaint Database. Our FMCSA Complaint Kit walks you through it with a ready-to-adapt narrative.

Hostage loads: when a mover holds your belongings

A "hostage load" is when a mover refuses to deliver your goods until you pay more than your binding estimate or agreed charges. This is one of the clearest violations in the entire moving world, and you have specific rights. Do not pay an unlawful demand in a panic. Instead:

Because hostage cases often involve time pressure and larger sums, they are also the situations where a claims consultant or attorney most often pays for itself.

Common mistakes that sink good claims

Avoid these
MistakeWhy it hurtsDo this instead
Signing a clean delivery receiptEvidence everything arrived intactNote damage on the inventory before signing
Throwing away damaged items or boxesDefeats inspection; grounds for denialKeep everything until the claim closes
Calling instead of writingA call does not trigger legal dutiesSubmit a written claim you can prove you sent
Missing the 9-month windowCan forfeit your right to recoverFile early; track the deadline from delivery
Accepting the first offerLeaves money on the tableCounter in writing with your valuation
No proof of valueAdjusters discount unsupported numbersAttach receipts, statements, or comparables

Recovering money after a bad move is rarely about luck — it is about following the process the rules already give you: document fast, know your coverage, put a defensible number on your loss, file in writing on time, and escalate without flinching when the carrier stalls. Work through the steps above, lean on the free tools and templates, and bring in a specialist when the size or complexity of the claim justifies it.

Moving claim questions, answered

For interstate (state-to-state) moves you generally have nine months from the delivery date to file a written claim with the carrier. The mover must acknowledge your claim within 30 days and must deny or pay it within 120 days. Intrastate (local) moves are governed by state rules, which are sometimes shorter, so file as early as you can.

Under released-value protection — the free, default coverage on most moves — the carrier is liable for only 60 cents per pound, per article. A 40-pound television is covered for 24 dollars regardless of its real value. Full-value protection removes that cap but costs extra and must be elected in writing before the move.

Yes. Do not throw anything away until your claim is fully resolved. The carrier has the right to inspect damaged goods and original packing, and disposing of them early can be used as a reason to reduce or deny your claim.

Often yes, but it is harder. Signing a clean delivery receipt is evidence that everything arrived in good condition. You can still file within the nine-month window, but you will need strong photos, inventory records, and a clear explanation. Always note visible damage on the inventory or bill of lading before the crew leaves.

A lowball offer is a negotiating position, not the final word. Respond in writing with your itemized valuation and supporting evidence, cite your coverage level, and reference the carrier obligations under federal rules. If they will not move, escalate with an FMCSA complaint, arbitration, or small-claims court.

For smaller claims, a free written claim letter plus good documentation usually takes an hour or two and is well worth it. For larger or denied claims, the time investment grows, which is when templates, a deadline tracker, or a claims specialist start to pay off.

Start your claim with the free toolkit

The damage claim letter, deadline tracker, and evidence checklist — everything in this guide, ready to use.