Minimum ACV

by billf » Sat Nov 22, 2014 05:46 pm
Posts: 1
Joined: 22 Nov 2014

Hi, I have an insurance claim at my house that roughly looks like this:
Replacement Cost: $10,000
Depreciation: $4,000
Deductible: $1,000
Net: $5,000 Paid by the insurance company

My adjuster told me that in order for me to receive the depreciation, I had to have the work done, spend the depreciated amount and show that I owed the money for the remaining work.
I signed a contract with a restoration company to do only $3,000 of work from the adjuster's estimate. Going through the adjuster’s estimate, I calculate that roughly $1,800 of this is the depreciated amount and $1,200 is the depreciation. I paid the contractor the $1,800 and asked the insurance company for $1,200 from the $4,000 total Depreciation for this work. Here's the problem. The insurance company said I had to spend the total depreciated amount $5,000 to get ANY depreciation. I’ve thought a lot about this and it makes no sense to me. My insurance is supposed to pay for current market value of damaged items, the depreciated amount. I told them that my items, building or personal, have current market value and this is what they are paying for. I can then chose to replace it or not. If I replace it then I’ll get the depreciation too. Why should replacing one item effect replacing another one. Another way of looking at this is suppose I had 5 damaged coats for $500 each with a depreciation of $100 each. They would initially pay me 5 X $400 = $2,000. If I chose to only replace one coat, shouldn’t they pay the depreciation on that one, $100?? Why do I have to spend $2,000 to get any depreciation? Please advise. I’m at my wits end… !
THANK YOU!
[/quote]

Total Comments: 1

Posted: Sun Nov 23, 2014 03:54 pm Post Subject:

You fail to consider the _only_ thing that matters... what does your policy state about when RCV is owed? Without knowing that, there is no way to know the answer.

Though I _suspect_ what you mention would/could be correct however, you still need to argue what your policy states. I also suspect you are only getting a little push back and with the correct arguing points your carrier would pay partial RCV. I think at this time they don't want to pay, pay, pay and keep paying on a partial claim. What is working against you is that they see this as 1 claim, not many. So they are only going to pay the difference on 1 claim. If it were multiple claims and you could break out the ACV/RCV then you'd have multiple deductibles. Again, read the policy but it may say the difference is owed.... when the damages are repaired and it refers to the "claim".

Add your comment

Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.