The Depreciation Recovery Calculator tells you exactly how much money the insurance company is holding back—and what you can realistically recover. On Replacement Cost Value (RCV) policies, insurers typically pay the Actual Cash Value (ACV) first—replacement cost minus depreciation—and hold the depreciation until you complete repairs and submit proof. That withheld amount can be $5,000, $15,000, or more. This tool puts a clear dollar figure on what you're owed so you know what to pursue.
What This Tool Does and Why It Matters
Replacement cost policies are structured in two phases: an initial payment (ACV) and a recoverable depreciation payment. The insurer applies a depreciation percentage to your RCV to calculate ACV, then withholds that depreciation until you prove repairs are complete. This calculator takes your Total RCV, Depreciation Percentage, and Deductible, and outputs your withheld depreciation amount and net recoverable amount—what you can expect to receive after repairs.
Why it matters: policyholders often miss this second payment. They settle, sign releases, or never submit the required documentation. The money sits with the insurer. Knowing your recoverable amount—in dollars—helps you prioritize documentation and follow-through so you don't leave thousands on the table.
Usage Examples with Realistic Scenarios
Scenario 1: Roof claim, RCV policy. Total RCV: $28,000. Depreciation applied: 12%. Deductible: $2,500. Enter 28000, 12, 2500. Withheld depreciation = $3,360. Net recoverable = $860 (withheld minus deductible, since you've already paid deductible on initial payment). Typical timeline: 2–6 weeks after proof submission.
Scenario 2: Water damage, full interior. RCV: $52,000. Depreciation: 18%. Deductible: $1,000. Withheld = $9,360. Net recoverable = $8,360. Timeline: 4–8 weeks typical for larger amounts.
Scenario 3: Fire/smoke loss. RCV: $78,000. Depreciation: 15%. Deductible: $5,000. Withheld = $11,700. Net recoverable = $6,700. Document repair completion and invoice proof to trigger release.
Realistic Dollar Scenario Walkthrough
James has an RCV policy. His roof claim has a total replacement cost value of $45,000. The insurer applied 14% depreciation (roof age and condition). His deductible is $2,500. He enters: RCV $45,000, Depreciation 14%, Deductible $2,500.
Results: Withheld depreciation = $6,300. Net recoverable amount = $3,800 (the $2,500 deductible was applied to the initial ACV payment). Timeline: 4–8 weeks typical. James now knows he has $3,800 coming—if he completes repairs and submits proof. He schedules contractor completion, gathers invoices and photos, and submits a formal depreciation recovery request. Without this calculation, he might have forgotten to pursue it.
Why Insurance Estimates Are Wrong (Depreciation-Specific)
Depreciation is a lever insurers use to reduce payouts:
- Excessive depreciation rates: A 10-year-old roof in good condition might warrant 15–20% depreciation; some insurers apply 35–45%.
- Double-counting: Ensure depreciation isn't applied to items that shouldn't be depreciated (e.g., labor, permits).
- Opaque calculations: Insurers don't always break out depreciation by line item. Request a detailed breakdown to verify.
- Delayed release: Some carriers delay releasing recoverable depreciation until you chase them. Document your submission and follow up.
Understanding these tactics helps you challenge unreasonable depreciation and secure timely recovery.
When to Escalate
Use these triggers to escalate:
- Insurer refuses to release after valid proof: Send a formal demand letter; cite policy language. Escalate to claims manager.
- Depreciation rate seems excessive: Request the depreciation methodology. Consider an independent assessment or appraisal clause.
- Delay beyond 60 days: File a complaint with your state department of insurance. Document all correspondence.
- ACV policy (no recoverable depreciation): On ACV-only policies, you cannot recover depreciation. Focus on challenging the depreciation rate applied to your initial payment.
The Bottom Line on Dollar Framing
Recoverable depreciation is real money—often $3,000 to $15,000 or more on moderate to large claims. Insurers don't volunteer it; you must complete repairs, submit proof, and formally request it. This calculator tells you exactly how much is at stake. Use the result to prioritize: if your net recoverable is $8,000, that's $8,000 worth of follow-through. Document completion, keep copies of everything, and don't assume the check will arrive without asking.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Settling and signing a release before repairs. A broad release can waive your right to recover depreciation. Read releases carefully.
- Not submitting proof of completion. Most policies require invoices, photos, or contractor certification. Send a complete package.
- Assuming depreciation is automatic. You must request it. Many insurers won't release it unless you formally ask.
- Confusing ACV and RCV. If your policy is ACV-only, there is no recoverable depreciation. This calculator applies to RCV policies.