Last updated: July 7, 2026 ยท Data reviewed quarterly
Most crashes are small ones — and “small” still costs real money. In 2026, the average no-injury claim settles around $9,900, while minor-injury claims commonly land between $5,000 and $25,000. Here is when a small claim is worth pursuing and when it is not.

What counts as a “minor” claim
Cosmetic or single-panel vehicle damage, no airbag deployment, no or brief medical treatment, and clear liability. The moment there is an MRI finding or ongoing treatment, you are out of “minor” territory — see our whiplash settlement data.
| Scenario | Typical range | Worth pursuing? |
|---|---|---|
| Bumper/panel repair only | $1,500 – $6,000 | Yes — simple property claim |
| No-injury claim (2026 avg) | ≈ $9,900 | Yes — includes rental, diminished value |
| Soft tissue, quick recovery | $5,000 – $15,000 | Yes — document treatment |
| Soft tissue + physical therapy | $10,000 – $25,000 | Yes — consider advice first |

The three traps in small claims
Trap 1: the fast $500-$2,500 offer. It arrives days after the crash, before you know if your neck stiffness is nothing or a disc. Signing releases all future claims. Trap 2: skipping the doctor. No medical record means no injury claim, period. Trap 3: forgetting diminished value. A repaired car with an accident history is worth less at resale; many states allow you to claim that difference from the at-fault insurer — bring comparable listings as proof.
Small claims court: the underused lever
If the at-fault driver is uninsured or the insurer lowballs a property-only claim, small claims court handles disputes up to $2,500-$25,000 depending on your state, usually without lawyers and for filing fees of $30-$100. Check your state courts’ self-help portal via USA.gov.
When to simply take the money
Clear liability, property-only, fair repair estimate from your own body shop, rental covered: take it and move on. The math of fighting over $800 rarely works. Our guide on settling without a lawyer covers the gray zone in between.
Free official help & resources
- Check repair fairness: get 2-3 written body-shop estimates; insurers must consider them
- Diminished value & total loss rules: your state insurance department via NAIC
- Taxes on settlements: IRS Publication 4345 (PDF) — physical injury compensation is generally not taxable
- Small claims self-help: USA.gov legal aid & court help
FAQ
Is it worth claiming $1,200 of damage?
Through the at-fault driver’s insurer, usually yes. Through your own collision coverage, compare the payout against your deductible plus any premium increase.
Can I negotiate a no-injury settlement?
Yes. Rental days, taxes and fees on repairs, and diminished value are the three most commonly missed line items.
The insurer totaled my car and the offer feels low.
Counter with 3-5 comparable local listings for your exact trim and mileage — see our total loss negotiation guide.
☕ This research is reader-supported. No law firm pays us. If this guide saved you time or money, you can buy the research team a coffee — it keeps the data free and updated.
This article is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Settlement values vary significantly by case and by state. Consult a licensed attorney in your state before making decisions about your claim.
