Claims Adjuster Software and Technology Tools

Claims adjuster software encompasses the platforms, databases, and integrated toolsets that support the evaluation, documentation, pricing, and settlement of insurance claims. This page covers the major software categories in active use across property, auto, liability, workers' compensation, and medical lines, explains the operational mechanics of each, and maps them against the decision boundaries adjusters face when selecting or deploying them. Understanding the technology layer is essential because software outputs — repair estimates, reserve calculations, valuation reports — directly influence settlement outcomes and can carry regulatory consequences under state insurance codes.

Definition and Scope

Claims adjuster technology falls into five primary categories, each serving a distinct function within the insurance claims process:

  1. Estimating and valuation platforms — Generate repair cost estimates for property and vehicle damage using localized labor and material databases.
  2. Claims management systems (CMS) — Core workflow platforms that track claim status, assign tasks, store documentation, and integrate with carrier systems.
  3. Aerial and satellite imagery tools — Provide roof measurement data, imagery, and damage overlays, particularly critical in catastrophe claims adjusting.
  4. Fraud detection and analytics platforms — Apply statistical modeling and pattern recognition to flag anomalous claims before settlement.
  5. Medical bill review and fee schedule systems — Used in workers' compensation and medical lines to apply state-mandated fee schedules and detect billing irregularities.

The scope of adjuster technology is defined partly by line of business and partly by whether the adjuster is a staff, independent, or public adjuster. Independent adjusters operating across states must often work within carrier-specific CMS environments, while public adjusters may use estimating platforms independently of carrier systems. The Insurance Services Office (ISO), a Verisk Analytics subsidiary, publishes standardized policy language and data products that underpin many CMS integrations.

How It Works

Estimating Platforms

The two dominant property estimating platforms in the United States are Xactimate, published by Xactware (a Verisk company), and CoreLogic's CoreLogic Claims suite. Xactimate uses price lists updated on a regional basis — reflecting local labor markets across more than 460 geographic price zones — to generate line-item repair estimates for residential and commercial structures. Adjusters enter scope-of-loss data, and the software produces an itemized estimate that can be exported to carrier systems or submitted directly to contractors.

For auto claims, CCC Intelligent Solutions, Mitchell International, and Audatex (a Solera company) each provide total-loss valuation and collision repair estimating tools. These platforms pull comparable vehicle sales data from regional markets to calculate actual cash value (ACV) under the replacement cost or fair market value standards applied by most state insurance regulations.

Claims Management Systems

A CMS functions as the operational backbone of the claims lifecycle. At intake, a claim record is created and assigned a file number. The system routes assignments, triggers statutory deadline reminders — such as the acknowledgment, investigation, and settlement timeframes mandated under most state unfair claims settlement practices acts modeled on the NAIC Model Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act — and stores all correspondence, photos, and signed documents.

Aerial and Measurement Tools

EagleView and Nearmap supply high-resolution aerial imagery and roof measurement reports. An EagleView Premium report, for example, delivers pitch, area, eaves, ridges, and hip measurements calculated from aerial captures, reducing the need for physical roof access. These tools are particularly valuable when coordinating property damage claims adjustment after wind or hail events affecting large geographic areas.

Fraud Detection Systems

Platforms such as Verisk's ISO ClaimSearch cross-reference new claims against a database of prior losses, allowing adjusters and carriers to identify patterns consistent with insurance fraud. ISO ClaimSearch contains records submitted by member companies and flags duplicate claims, prior losses at the same address, and claimant history. Insurance fraud detection workflows typically integrate these queries into the early investigation phase of the CMS.

Common Scenarios

Residential hail claim: An adjuster receives a storm claim assignment. An EagleView report is ordered immediately to confirm roof pitch, surface area, and storm date alignment against hail data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Storm Events Database. The adjuster uses Xactimate to build a scope of loss from field measurements and photos, then exports the estimate to the carrier CMS for supervisor review and reserve setting.

Total-loss auto claim: After a collision, a CCC One valuation report is generated using comparable vehicles sold within a defined radius of the insured's zip code. If the repair estimate — built in Mitchell or Audatex — exceeds the vehicle's ACV threshold (commonly 75–80% of ACV, though the threshold varies by carrier and state), the vehicle is declared a total loss. State regulations in jurisdictions such as Florida (Florida Statute §626.9743) specify disclosure obligations when total-loss valuations are disputed.

Workers' compensation medical review: A medical bill for physical therapy is submitted following a workplace injury. The bill review platform applies the applicable state fee schedule — mandated under each state's workers' compensation statute and administered through agencies such as California's Division of Workers' Compensation — to determine the maximum reimbursable amount per procedure code.

Decision Boundaries

The selection and use of adjuster technology is governed by a combination of carrier policy, regulatory requirement, and line-of-business fit. Key decision boundaries include:

The contrast between desk-based and field-based technology use is significant. A desk adjuster relies almost entirely on software outputs — imagery, estimating reports, and CMS data — while a field adjuster supplements software with direct physical inspection. Neither workflow eliminates the other; carriers use both in combination based on claim complexity, geographic deployment cost, and regulatory inspection requirements.

References

📜 2 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

Explore This Site