Inside the May 2026 Filer/Responder Workshops

AF recently facilitated its latest filer/responder workshops on May 19 and 21, with 166 member company representatives in attendance. The purpose of these workshops is to drive decision quality by:   
  • Sharing information to improve filing and responding effectiveness.   
  • Answering questions attendees have regarding filing and responding workflows and procedures.   

The following are key takeaways from the May workshops:  

Shared Evidence – Refute Versus Support

  • The recovering company must support their damages through evidence and may request a revisit if the damages are challenged.
  • The revisit is used to refute the challenge to damages raised by the responder.
  • The evidence attached on the revisit must refute the challenge as well.

Damage Arguments

  • Remember: The arbitrator is your audience!
  • Provide the arbitrator with sufficient information regarding the type and amount of damages in dispute.
  • Without a specific reason or indication of what the proper amount should be, it will be difficult for the arbitrator to consider the argument or agree with your position.
  • Use specific arguments, point to the evidence, explain why the reduction is warranted, and show the mathematical breakdown of the reduction.

Post-Hearing Denial of Coverage

  • Rule 3-9 allows for post-decision “coverage denial” defenses when the request is received within 60 days of the decision publication and no less than 60 days before the statute of limitations expires.
  • A copy of the coverage denial letter to the party seeking coverage must be attached to the PDI submitted for the Rule 3-9 defense.
  • The party seeking coverage is the named insured, defined insured, non-permissive driver, excluded driver, etc.
  • Do not submit denial letters to other insurers, the other party’s named insured, etc.

Damage Categories: Dos and Don’ts
Do

  • Itemize damages under the correct category name.
  • Use the itemization categories to help the arbitrator give you the best award.
  • Provide the correct dollar amount supported by evidence.
  • Present the correct suggested dollar amount when disputing damages.

Don’t

  • Don’t provide evidence that does not match requested or disputed damages. Verify your evidence supports your requested amounts or disputed amounts.
  • Don’t list your total loss damages under the “Auto Damage” itemization category.  

Quick Tips
Enter a damage dispute only:

  • If you have specific challenges about the reasonableness, necessity, or relatedness of the damages claimed.
  • When damage evidence has not properly been shared.
  • In situations where you have a lack of coverage for a portion of the damages claimed.

Do not enter arguments for the following as a damage dispute:

  • If the subject of your dispute is strictly related to liability and not to damages.
  • When there is a lack of proof of payment.
  • If there are any issues related to jurisdiction.

Concurrent Coverage – Rule 3-9:

Rule 2-8 – Consider the Costs:

  • “The responding company will reimburse the recovering company for all legal expenses and court costs resulting from the improper objection to jurisdiction, as well as the additional arbitration filing fee.”
  • Make sure your objection to jurisdiction does not end up costing your company.

Our next filer/responder workshops will be held on July 21 and 23 at 2 p.m. ET. Enroll today. We hope to see you there!

The information provided is for general informational purposes only and should not be submitted in cases as evidence.