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Just realized a lot of people don't really understand the difference between recoverable and non-recoverable depreciation when it comes to homeowners insurance. Figured I'd break it down since it actually matters when you file a claim.
So here's the thing: when you have homeowners insurance, everything gets assigned a value. But that value doesn't stay the same forever because stuff wears out and loses value over time. That's depreciation. When you file a claim, the insurance company doesn't pay you the full replacement cost of what you lost. Instead, they calculate something called Actual Cash Value (ACV), which is basically the replacement cost minus how much the item has depreciated.
Now here's where it gets important. If your policy has replacement cost coverage, you might be able to get reimbursed for that depreciation. That's called recoverable depreciation. But if your policy doesn't have that coverage, you're stuck with non-recoverable depreciation, which means the insurance company only pays you the ACV and you eat the depreciation cost yourself.
Let me give you a concrete example. Say a storm destroys your TV. You bought it two years ago for $2,000 and that model typically lasts five years. That means it loses about 20% of its value every year. So after two years, your TV is worth about $1,200 in actual cash value. The $800 difference between what you paid and what it's worth now? That's your recoverable depreciation if your policy covers it. If not, that $800 is non-recoverable depreciation and you're out of luck.
Here's a bigger example with a roof. Let's say your roof costs $10,000 to replace and it's supposed to last 20 years. That means it depreciates 5% per year. If your roof was already 10 years old when the damage happened, it's depreciated 50%. So the insurance company values it at $5,000. With a non-recoverable depreciation policy, they only pay you that $5,000 and you have to cover the other $5,000 out of pocket to actually get your roof fixed.
The difference between recoverable and non-recoverable depreciation basically comes down to whether your insurance company helps cover the wear and tear on your stuff or if you're paying for it yourself. Definitely worth checking your policy to see which type you have, especially if you're thinking about filing a claim.