Minnesota Disability Denial Case Value Calculator
The single most important question in a Minnesota disability-insurance denial is whether your policy is governed by ERISA or by state law. Employer-provided group disability plans are almost always ERISA plans, which sharply limit your remedies — you can generally recover only the benefits owed, not punitive or bad-faith damages — and require you to exhaust the plan's internal appeals before suing. Individual policies you bought yourself are governed by Minnesota insurance law, which allows broader recovery.
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In Minnesota, you generally have 6 years to file a disability denial claim. What your case is worth depends on your specific damages and Minnesota's laws — use the calculator below for a free estimate of your low-to-high range.
How Minnesota Law Affects Your Disability Denial Case
Deadlines in Minnesota disability cases are unforgiving. ERISA plans require you to file each internal appeal within the window stated in your plan (often 180 days), and failing to exhaust those appeals can forfeit your right to sue at all. The administrative record you build during the appeal is usually the only evidence a court will later consider, so it must be complete.
After exhausting appeals, the deadline to file suit in Minnesota is generally around 6 years, longer than the national average of 2.7 years (ERISA plans may also impose their own contractual limitations period). Confirm the exact deadline for your policy type before it runs.
Recovery in a Minnesota disability case typically means all past-due benefits plus reinstatement of ongoing monthly payments; individual-policy cases can add interest, bad-faith damages, and attorney fees. Consistent treating-physician records, functional-capacity evaluations, and evidence that the insurer relied on its own hand-picked reviewers are what turn a denial into a winning claim.
Key Minnesota Laws
How Does Minnesota Compare?
Minnesota Disability Denial FAQs
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Legal Disclaimer
This calculator uses Minnesota's statutes as of 2026-03-06. Laws change frequently. This tool provides estimates for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Verify current rules with a Minnesota-licensed attorney before making decisions about your case. Learn about our methodology.
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