When a property insurance claim can't be settled, appraisal may offer a fair, structured path to resolution — without going to court.
Each side selects a qualified, independent appraiser to assess the damage.
If the two appraisers agree on the loss amount, their decision becomes binding.
If the appraisers disagree, they appoint a neutral umpire to make the final decision.
The agreement of any two of the three — appraisers or umpire — sets the binding loss amount.
What We Do
We handle residential and commercial property claims of all sizes. Our goal is always the same: a fair, accurate, and defensible determination of the amount of loss.
When the two appraisers can't agree, they jointly select a neutral umpire to issue a binding award. Tom is regularly selected by appraisal panels to serve in that role. His construction background gives him the depth to evaluate scope disputes, not just dollar differences.
We serve as appraiser for either the insured or the insurer — reviewing estimates, scopes, and positions to develop an independent, well-documented damage assessment. We are also regularly retained by attorneys representing either side in the appraisal process.
Hail, wind, fire, and water damage to residential properties of any size. We assess damage accurately and document it thoroughly — roofing, siding, interiors, and everything in between.
Retail centers, apartment complexes, warehouses, churches, and farm properties with multiple structures. We have experience handling large commercial appraisals where the scope is complex and the stakes are high.
The Process
Each party — the insured and the insurer — selects their own qualified, independent appraiser to assess the damage.
The two appraisers communicate and work to reach agreement on the amount of loss. If they agree, that decision is binding.
If the appraisers cannot agree, they jointly select a neutral umpire. If they can't agree on an umpire, either party may petition the court to appoint one.
The agreement of any two of the three — either appraiser with the umpire — sets the binding loss amount and closes the dispute.
The appraisal clause is a faster, less expensive alternative to litigation. When both sides have qualified representation, the process moves efficiently and produces a defensible, binding result.
About Tom
Tom Vesel started in construction — actually building things. That background became a real advantage when he moved into property insurance consulting, and it still shows up in every appraisal matter he takes on. He holds an active Minnesota contractor's license.
Based in Minnesota, Tom handles matters ranging from straightforward residential hail claims to complex multi-building commercial losses. He holds more umpire appointments than appraiser positions — a reflection of the trust both sides place in his judgment.
Tom works with HAAG Corporation as a Senior Building Consultant and is an active member of the Insurance Appraisal and Umpire Association (IAUA). He holds the P.L.A.N. Certified Property Loss Appraiser & Umpire (CPLAU) designation and is state-licensed as an umpire and appraiser in Iowa.
Why Tom Vesel Consulting
We've actually built things. That hands-on background makes a difference when a dispute comes down to scope — not just dollars.
Tom worked as a general contractor before moving into insurance appraisal. He's pulled permits, managed builds, and been on job sites — which means scope disputes get evaluated from real construction knowledge.
Tom serves as appraiser for insureds, carriers, and their attorneys — and holds more umpire appointments than appraiser positions. Both sides of the table trust his neutrality and judgment.
Tom works as a Senior Building Consultant with HAAG Corporation. That forensic rigor carries directly into appraisal work — functional damage, hail analysis, and thorough field documentation.
We work in Xactimate and can evaluate a carrier's estimate and a contractor's estimate side by side, line by line, to identify exactly where the gap comes from.
Based in Minnesota, we know the Midwest — the contractors, the storm patterns, the carriers. Fluent in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Iowa appraisal law and current on relevant case law.
We keep the process moving. Both sides know where things stand, the work is documented, and nobody is left wondering what comes next.
Where We Work
Based in Minnesota, we regularly handle matters throughout Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, and Iowa — and we will travel anywhere nationally for the right engagement.
The majority of our appraisal and umpire work is concentrated in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, and Iowa, where we have deep familiarity with local market conditions, material pricing, storm history, and the carriers and contractors who operate in the region.
Common Questions
Insurance appraisal can feel unfamiliar if you haven't been through it before. Here are some of the most common questions Tom gets from property owners, contractors, and insurers alike.
Get in Touch
Reach out about any appraisal or umpire matter. We work with property owners, contractors, insurance carriers, and attorneys on both sides of the table. We'll have a direct conversation about whether we can help and what that looks like.