Home warranty companies have a reputation problem — and they've earned it. The industry has a claims denial rate that frustrates homeowners who paid for coverage expecting peace of mind. If your home warranty company is refusing to cover a repair, here's how to fight back.
Why Home Warranty Claims Get Denied
Common denial reasons (and why they're often wrong):
- "Pre-existing condition": The company claims the issue existed before your policy started
- "Lack of maintenance": They allege you didn't maintain the appliance properly
- "Not covered": The specific component or failure type is excluded in the fine print
- "Improper installation": They claim the original installation was faulty
- "Code violation": The existing system doesn't meet current building codes
Step-by-Step: Get Your Claim Approved
Step 1: Read Your Contract Carefully
Before calling:
- Find the specific coverage section for your claim
- Note what IS covered and what exclusions exist
- Look for the dispute resolution process
- Check the claims filing deadline
Step 2: File the Claim Properly
- Call your warranty company's claims line
- Describe the issue without speculating about the cause
- Get a claim number and the name of the representative
- Ask when to expect the assigned contractor
Step 3: If the Claim Is Denied
- Request written denial: Get the specific reason and policy provision cited
- Get an independent diagnosis: Hire your own licensed contractor to inspect and provide a written report. This report should address the warranty company's denial reason directly.
- File a formal appeal: Send a written appeal with your contractor's report via certified mail
- Reference your contract: Cite the specific coverage language that supports your claim
Step 4: Escalate
- Supervisor/manager: Request escalation within the warranty company
- State insurance department: Home warranty companies are regulated in most states. File a complaint.
- BBB complaint: Home warranty companies actively respond to BBB complaints
- State attorney general: File a consumer protection complaint
- Social media: Public complaints sometimes get faster resolution
- Small claims court: For denied claims with clear coverage, small claims court is effective. The filing fee is $30-75 and many warranty companies settle rather than send a representative.
How to Strengthen Your Position
- Document maintenance: Keep records of all appliance maintenance and repairs
- Get a home inspection: When your warranty starts, document the condition of all covered systems
- Record conversations: In one-party consent states, record your calls with the warranty company
- Get multiple contractor opinions: One diagnosis can be dismissed; three are much harder to ignore
- Calculate the full cost: Include the service call fee, time off work, and inconvenience — these strengthen your complaint
Quick Checklist
- [ ] Read your contract's coverage section for the specific claim
- [ ] File the claim promptly with detailed description
- [ ] Get a claim number and representative's name
- [ ] If denied, request written denial with specific policy citation
- [ ] Get an independent contractor diagnosis and written report
- [ ] File a formal written appeal via certified mail
- [ ] Escalate to state regulator and BBB if appeal fails
- [ ] Consider small claims court for clear-cut denials
Bottom Line
Home warranty companies deny claims at high rates, but most denials can be overturned with an independent contractor's report and a formal appeal. The key is getting everything in writing and escalating through regulatory channels when the warranty company stonewalls. Small claims court is surprisingly effective — most companies would rather settle than fight in court.
Sources
- National Home Service Contract Association — industry standards
- State insurance department consumer complaint processes