Property Damage

Your Property. Your Rights. Our Fight.

When your home or property suffers damage, the financial and emotional impact can be devastating. Whether it’s from a fire, flood, natural disaster, or negligent third party, you have the right to full and fair compensation for repairs, replacement costs, and related losses.

 

Unfortunately, insurance companies are notorious for denying, delaying, or undervaluing property damage claims. They employ teams of adjusters and attorneys to minimize payouts. Attorney Arian stands in your corner, holding insurance companies accountable and fighting for the full value of your claim.

Property Damage Cases We Handle

Insurance Bad Faith — When Your Insurer Won't Pay

Unreasonable Claim Denial

When an insurer denies a valid claim without a reasonable basis or proper investigation.

Lowball Settlement Offers

Intentionally undervaluing your claim and pressuring you to accept less than you deserve.

Unnecessary Delays

Dragging out the claims process hoping you'll give up or accept less.

Policy Misinterpretation

Twisting policy language to avoid covering legitimate damages.

How We Handle Your Property Damage Case

Assess

We evaluate your damage, review your insurance policy, and determine the full value of your claim.

Challenge

We challenge the insurer's denial or lowball offer with evidence, expert reports, and legal arguments.

Recover

We negotiate or litigate to secure the maximum recovery for your property damage and related losses.

Don't Let Insurance Companies Win

If your insurance claim has been denied, delayed, or undervalued, contact us today. We’ll review your case for free and fight to get you the compensation you’re owed.

Frequently Asked Questions

In California, the statute of limitations for most personal injury cases is two years from the date of injury. For claims against government entities, the deadline is only six months. It's crucial to act quickly — waiting too long could forfeit your right to compensation entirely.

California follows a "pure comparative negligence" rule. This means you can still recover damages even if you were partially at fault. Your compensation is simply reduced by your percentage of fault. For example, if you were 20% at fault, you can still recover 80% of your damages.

You may be entitled to compensation for medical expenses (current and future), lost wages, loss of earning capacity, pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and in some cases, punitive damages. The exact amount depends on the specifics of your case.

Free Case Evaluation

Discuss your personal injury case with our experienced legal team. We don't charge unless we win.

Why Attorney Arian?

No Fee Unless We Win

100% contingency — zero upfront cost

Available 24/7

Day or night, we answer your call

Proven Results

Aggressive representation that delivers