Understand Your Insurance Claim

Plain-language guides on the items and terms that matter most when reviewing your property repair estimate.

Commonly Omitted Items

Overhead & Profit: The 20% Most People Leave on the Table

On my own claim, I didn't know O&P existed until a contractor looked at my estimate and said, 'Where's the O&P line?'...

Subfloor Replacement: The Hidden Layer That Ruins New Flooring

On my own claim, the adjuster walked right over soft spots in the kitchen floor and never said a word about the subfl...

Mold After Water Damage: What the Estimate Almost Never Includes

We didn't think about mold until three weeks after our water damage, when the musty smell wouldn't go away. By then i...

Contents Pack-Out: Stop Moving Your Own Furniture

I spent an entire weekend moving furniture and boxes into the garage myself. My back was wrecked. Then I found out pr...

Appliance Disconnect & Reconnect: $800-$1,500 That's Almost Never Listed

When your kitchen or laundry area needs repairs, every appliance has to be disconnected, moved out, and reconnected a...

Drywall Texture Matching: Why Your Patch Still Shows After Painting

After drywall is repaired or replaced, the texture on the new section needs to match the rest of the wall or ceiling....

Full-Room Painting: Why Touching Up a Patch Never Works

When walls are repaired after water damage, fire, or other covered losses, the repainted patch rarely matches the sur...

Baseboard & Trim: The Line Item That Disappears from Flooring Estimates

When flooring is replaced, baseboards have to come off first and go back on afterward. Or more likely, get replaced e...

Temporary Kitchen: Because No One Can Eat Takeout for Two Months

When your kitchen is torn out for repairs, you can go weeks or months without the ability to cook. Nobody mentioned t...

Water Extraction & Structural Drying: The First 24 Hours Decide Everything

Professional water extraction and structural drying is the first and most important step after any water event. This ...

Window & Door Trim: $400-$900 Per Room That Gets Left Off Estimates

Window and door trim is one of those things you never think about until it's damaged. It's vulnerable to water damage...

Cabinet Hardware: Soft-Close Hinges and Full-Extension Slides Aren't Free Upgrades

When cabinets are replaced in an insurance claim, the hardware should match what you had in quality, finish, and func...

Permit & Inspection Fees: The $200-$1,500 Line Item Nobody Adds

Most major home repairs require building permits and must pass inspections before work is complete. Permit fees typic...

Material & Quality

Why Your Insurance Can't Just Replace 'the Damaged Part'

Your policy says "restore to pre-loss condition." So when damaged materials are part of a continuous surface, a parti...

Like Kind and Quality: Why Your $600 Cabinets Can't Be Replaced with $200 Ones

Like-kind-and-quality (LKQ) is the standard written into virtually every homeowner policy: replacement materials must...

Your Hardwood Floor Is Not Just 'Hardwood' and the Grade Changes Everything

Hardwood flooring varies by species, grade, plank width, and finish method. Each variable changes the price per squar...

Stock vs. Semi-Custom vs. Custom Cabinets: A $10,000 Difference Your Adjuster Might Miss

Kitchen cabinets have three quality tiers with enormous price gaps between them. Stock cabinets from Home Depot or Lo...

Countertop Stone Levels and Edge Profiles: Where $3,000 Goes Missing

Countertops are priced on three axes: material type, stone level (for natural stone), and edge profile. Level 1 grani...

Tile Pattern Complexity: Why Your Herringbone Floor Costs Double a Grid Layout

Tile installation cost depends on three things: pattern complexity, tile size, and substrate preparation. A basic 12x...

Builder-Grade Paint vs. Premium: Why the $40-Per-Gallon Difference Matters

Paint is not paint. Builder-grade at $15-$25 per gallon gives you basic coverage with poor washability and faster col...

Your $500 Faucet Cannot Be Replaced with a $75 One

Plumbing fixtures span a massive price range. Builder-grade faucets run $50-$150 with plastic internals and chrome fi...

Solid, Engineered, or Laminate: Three Products That Look Alike but Price $10,000 Apart

From three feet away, solid hardwood, engineered hardwood, and laminate can all look like wood floors. But they are f...

Standard, Moisture-Resistant, and Fire-Rated Drywall: The Wrong Type Fails Inspection

Drywall is not one product. Standard white-face drywall goes in bedrooms and living rooms. Moisture-resistant green b...

Fiberglass, Blown-In, or Spray Foam: What R-Value Means for Your Claim

Insulation is rated by R-value: resistance to heat transfer. Higher R-values mean better insulation. When your repair...

Three-Tab vs. Architectural Shingles vs. Tile vs. Metal: What Your Roof Is Actually Worth

Your roof material determines everything about replacement cost. Three-tab asphalt shingles are the budget option at ...

Insurance Process

Your Insurance Will Pay for a Hotel. Seriously.

Nobody told me about this one. Additional Living Expenses (ALE) coverage pays for the extra costs of living away from...

That First Check Is Not Your Full Settlement

On a Replacement Cost Value policy, your first check only covers the depreciated value. The rest, called the deprecia...

RCV vs. ACV: The Policy Detail Worth Thousands

Your insurance policy is either Replacement Cost Value (RCV) or Actual Cash Value (ACV). RCV pays to replace damaged ...

Xactimate: The Software Behind Every Insurance Estimate

Xactimate is the industry-standard software used by insurers, contractors, and public adjusters to price repair work....

Public Adjusters: When Hiring One Pays for Itself

A public adjuster is a licensed professional who represents you, the homeowner, in your insurance claim. They underst...

Document Everything. Your Claim Depends on It.

The photos, videos, and records you create in the first hours after damage are the foundation of your entire claim. T...

Your Insurance Claim, Week by Week

An insurance claim moves through five distinct stages: filing, inspection, estimate, repairs, and final settlement. E...

Your Estimate Is Too Low. Here Is How to Fight It.

If your insurance estimate falls short of actual repair costs, you have the right to dispute it. The process escalate...

Your Deductible Might Be Bigger Than You Think

Your deductible is what you pay before insurance kicks in. It might be a flat $1,000-$5,000. Or it might be a percent...

Supplements: Getting Paid for What the Adjuster Could Not See

A supplement adds items to your existing insurance estimate after the original scope was written. Hidden damage behin...

Recoverable vs. Non-Recoverable Depreciation: Where Your Money Goes

When your insurer calculates your payout, they subtract depreciation from the replacement cost. Whether you can recov...

Your Declarations Page: The One Document That Controls Your Claim

Your declarations page is a one or two page summary of your entire insurance policy. Dwelling coverage, personal prop...

State-Specific Guides

Florida Insurance Claims: Hurricane Deductibles, Mold Rules, and the Strictest Building Codes in the Country

Florida is the hardest state in America to file an insurance claim. Between percentage-based hurricane deductibles, t...

Texas Insurance Claims: Hail Deductibles, Wind Damage, and What the Texas Insurance Code Actually Requires

Texas gets hit with more hail damage than any other state. The insurance industry pays out billions every year in Tex...

California Insurance Claims: Wildfire Rules, Seismic Codes, and the Regulations That Protect Homeowners

California has the strongest homeowner protections in the country when it comes to insurance claims. The California D...

Louisiana Insurance Claims: Hurricane Season, Named-Storm Deductibles, and What Homeowners Need After Every Storm

Louisiana gets hit by hurricanes more often than almost any other state, and the insurance market reflects it. Named-...

New York Insurance Claims: From NYC Code Nightmares to Upstate Ice Dams

New York is not one market. It is dozens. NYC has its own building code entirely separate from the rest of the state....

Colorado Insurance Claims: Hail Deductibles, Wildfire Codes, and the Roofer on Every Corner

Colorado's insurance landscape is shaped by two forces, hail and wildfire. The state sees more hail claims than almos...

North Carolina Insurance Claims: Hurricane Deductibles, Coastal Codes, and the Claim Rules You Need to Know

North Carolina sits at the intersection of hurricane risk on the coast and severe storm risk inland. The state has pe...

Georgia Insurance Claims: Tornado Alley South, Licensing Rules, and the Claims You Can Not Afford to Botch

Georgia sees severe weather year-round, tornadoes, straight-line winds, hail, and tropical storm remnants pushing up ...

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