Twenge + Twombley

Attorney Firm — Beaufort, SC

Most cases settle. All of them get fought. No fee unless you win.

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About Twenge + Twombley

Twenge + Twombley is an insurance attorney serving policyholders in Beaufort, South Carolina. When a carrier denies, delays, or underpays a valid claim, Twenge + Twombley pursues every available remedy — including bad-faith litigation, statutory penalties, and fee-shifting provisions that can force the carrier to cover your legal costs.

Get in touch

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What Twenge + Twombley helps with

  • attorney claims
  • Insurance Disputes claims
  • Property Damage claims

How Twenge + Twombley works with clients

  1. Intake

    Tell the story of your loss and share your policy and damage photos.

  2. Assessment

    Independent review of your claim — scope, policy, and carrier position.

  3. Action plan

    A clear next step tailored to your situation, with written recommendations.

  4. Resolution

    Ongoing advocacy through documentation, negotiation, and settlement.

Service area

Service area map — Beaufort, SC
Beaufort, SC
  • Beaufort
  • Beaufort metro area
  • South Carolina statewide

Why hire a licensed attorney in South Carolina

  • Handles what negotiation can't

    When a carrier is acting in bad faith, stonewalling, or flatly denying coverage, litigation is the tool that makes them respond.

  • Contingency billing on most cases

    Most insurance attorneys don't charge upfront. Statutory fee-shifting provisions in many states make the carrier pay if you win.

  • Protects the statute of limitations

    Claim-related lawsuits have hard deadlines. A brief consultation can tell you whether the clock is close to running out on your claim.

Representative outcomes

Typical attorney results on common claim types in South Carolina. Actual outcomes depend on policy language, damage, and timing.

$14K → $62KWater damage

Burst supply line, kitchen ceiling collapse

A Beaufort homeowner came home to a ceiling already on the floor — an upstairs supply line had failed overnight. The carrier's field adjuster scoped cosmetic drywall repair and a fraction of the flooring. Reopening the claim with proper moisture mapping, cabinet box damage documentation, and code-required electrical work moved the settlement from roughly $14K to $62K — enough to replace the full affected floor and bring the home back to pre-loss condition.

Post-storm roof denial reversed

Hail damage

After a SC hail event, a homeowner's carrier denied roof replacement, calling the damage cosmetic. Fresh inspection with calibrated roof-test squares, shingle mat cross-sections, and NOAA storm-data pairing established a supportable replacement case. The denial was reversed and the homeowner received a full roof replacement plus matching gutters and screens.

Reopened claim, corrected scope, better recovery

Reopen & supplement

An initial carrier estimate missed several covered line items. Careful scope review, supporting photographs, and code-required documentation resulted in a supplemental payment materially larger than the original offer — returning the policyholder closer to whole.

Carriers attorneys commonly handle

If your policy is with any of these, Twenge + Twombley can help.

State FarmAllstateFarmersTravelersUSAALiberty MutualNationwideProgressive

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Questions people ask

Do I have a case against my insurance company?

Possibly. If your claim was denied, underpaid, or unreasonably delayed, South Carolina law may give you a cause of action — including bad-faith and statutory remedies. The first consultation is usually free and tells you whether litigation is worth pursuing.

How much does an insurance attorney cost?

Most insurance attorneys work on contingency — a percentage of the recovery, typically paid only if you win. Statutory attorney's-fees provisions in South Carolina can also shift fees to the carrier in some cases.

How long does an insurance lawsuit take?

It varies. Many cases resolve in mediation within 6–12 months of filing. Complex bad-faith or large commercial cases can take longer. Twenge + Twombley will walk you through a realistic timeline during the initial review.

Should I hire an attorney or a public adjuster?

Public adjusters handle the claim itself — documentation, negotiation, recovery. Attorneys handle the legal fight when the carrier won't play fair. Many successful claims use both, often in sequence.

Answers based on attorney best practices in South Carolina. Twenge + Twombley can speak to your specific situation in a free call.

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