Does My Insurance Pay Full Value or Depreciated Value If Something Happens?
Most homeowners don’t know if their insurance pays full value or a reduced amount until they file a claim. Replacement cost covers what it takes to rebuild or replace today, while actual cash value factors in depreciation. That difference can significantly impact your payout, especially with rising costs.
Published March 30, 2026
Most homeowners don’t realize there are two very different ways insurance pays out a claim. Did you know this? I didn't until my agent started explaining it to me.
The difference between replacement cost and actual cash value can mean thousands of dollars out of your pocket. This is where one of the biggest misunderstandings in Property & Casualty insurance happens.
Replacement cost means your insurance pays to rebuild or replace something at today’s prices.
If your roof, furniture, or home is damaged, this coverage pays what it costs now—not what it was worth years ago. With rising material and labor costs, this type of coverage has become more important than ever.
Actual cash value, on the other hand, factors in depreciation before paying your claim.
That means your payout is reduced based on age, wear, and condition. A 10-year-old roof or older furniture will not be reimbursed at full value. Instead, you receive what it is considered worth today.
This is where the gap becomes real for homeowners.
Two policies can look similar on paper, but the payout after a loss can be drastically different. Many homeowners only discover this difference after filing a claim, when expectations and reality don’t match.
In today’s market, more policies are quietly shifting parts of coverage to actual cash value.
Roof coverage is one of the most common examples. Some policies no longer offer full replacement cost on roofs, especially as they age. This change is happening as insurance companies adjust to increased claim costs.
Understanding which parts of your policy are replacement cost versus actual cash value is critical.
It is not always an all-or-nothing situation. Your home may be covered at replacement cost, while certain items or structures are not.
The most important step is reviewing your policy before you need it.
A simple conversation can clarify how your policy pays, where the gaps are, and what adjustments might make sense. When it comes to insurance, knowing how you get paid is just as important as knowing what is covered.