Property Insurance

ACV vs. Replacement Cost
Calculator

Calculate physical depreciation and see exactly what an ACV policy pays out — versus what it costs to replace the asset new.

💰 ACV Estimator

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ACV vs. Replacement Cost Calculator
Linear depreciation — insurance claim payout estimator
What it costs to buy or build a brand-new equivalent item at today's prices.
How long the asset has been in service.
Total typical industry lifespan for this asset type.
About ACV vs. Replacement Cost
What is the difference between ACV and replacement cost?
Replacement Cost Value (RCV) pays what it costs to buy a brand-new equivalent item at today's prices, with no deduction for age or wear. Actual Cash Value (ACV) deducts physical depreciation — the asset's consumed lifespan — from that replacement cost. An RCV policy costs more in premium but eliminates your out-of-pocket gap after a loss. An ACV policy costs less but leaves you funding the depreciation deduction yourself.
How is the depreciation percentage calculated?
This calculator uses straight-line (linear) depreciation: Depreciation % = (Age ÷ Useful Life) × 100, capped at 100%. It's the method most insurance adjusters use for standard property claims on roofs, HVAC systems, flooring, and structural components. Some specialty items — electronics, vehicles, industrial equipment — may use accelerated depreciation schedules that front-load the deduction more heavily in early years.
What is a "recoverable depreciation" provision?
Many RCV policies pay in two stages: an initial ACV check at the time of loss, then a second "recoverable depreciation" payment once repairs are completed or replacement is purchased. You can only collect the full RCV if you actually repair or replace the item — if you take the cash and don't rebuild, you typically keep only the ACV payment. Check your policy's "loss settlement" language carefully.
What's a typical useful life for common property types?
Insurers and adjusters commonly use these industry benchmarks: asphalt shingle roof 20–25 years; HVAC system 15–20 years; commercial flat roof 15–25 years; carpeting/flooring 10–15 years; electrical wiring 30–40 years; plumbing 20–30 years; commercial kitchen equipment 10–15 years. These vary by manufacturer, maintenance history, and jurisdiction. Some states regulate the useful life schedules adjusters may apply.
Property Insurance Claims Guide

The Depreciation Check: What Your Policy Actually Pays When You File a Claim

The letter arrives. The adjuster has inspected the damage. The check amount is half what you expected. The explanation buried in the claim summary reads "less physical depreciation," and the number beside it explains the gap between what you thought your insurance covered and what they're actually sending you.

This is how most policyholders first learn the difference between Actual Cash Value and Replacement Cost — not from their agent before the policy was written, but from an adjuster after the loss has already happened.

Two Policies. Two Very Different Checks.

Every property insurance policy settles losses under one of two frameworks. Replacement Cost Value (RCV) pays what it costs to buy or build the damaged property new, using materials of like kind and quality at today's prices. No age adjustment, no wear-and-tear deduction — just the number on the contractor's estimate.

Actual Cash Value (ACV) starts from the same replacement cost baseline, then applies a depreciation deduction that reflects how much of the asset's functional lifespan has already been consumed. The formula is conceptually simple:

ACV = Replacement Cost − (Replacement Cost × Depreciation %) Depreciation % = (Age ÷ Useful Life) × 100

The practical difference between these two policies shows up clearly in a concrete scenario.

A Roof That's Halfway Through Its Life

A commercial property owner with a 10-year-old asphalt shingle roof files a wind damage claim. Contractor quote to replace the roof: $80,000. Standard useful life for asphalt shingles: 20 years.

Policy TypeCalculationCheck Amount
Replacement Cost $80,000 (no deduction) $80,000
Actual Cash Value $80,000 − $40,000 (50% dep.) $40,000

The $40,000 gap doesn't come from the insurer. It comes from the owner's operating account. If cash isn't available, the roof either gets a partial repair or the building sits exposed while financing is arranged.

The gap compounds with age. A roof at year 5 of 20 carries a 25% depreciation deduction. At year 15, it's 75%. The older the asset when the loss occurs, the larger the check you have to write yourself on an ACV policy — regardless of how well you maintained it.

What Adjusters Actually Use

The straight-line depreciation formula in this calculator is the most commonly used method for structural property claims. An adjuster divides the asset's age by its useful life, multiplies by the replacement cost, and deducts the result.

Useful life benchmarks aren't arbitrary — most states and insurance carriers reference established tables from publications like the Xactimate pricing guide or the Marshall & Swift cost manual. Some items have regulated depreciation schedules in certain states, which limits how aggressively an adjuster can depreciate them.

What they can't do, though, is pay you more than the replacement cost. The ACV is always floored at zero (fully depreciated) and capped at the replacement cost (brand new). Anything outside that range is a negotiation worth having with a licensed public adjuster.

The Case for Upgrading Your Policy Before the Loss

The decision between ACV and RCV coverage doesn't come up again after the policy is written — not until a loss forces it. By then, the choice is locked in.

  • RCV coverage costs more up front — typically 10–20% higher premium depending on the property and carrier. But it eliminates a potentially much larger out-of-pocket exposure at claim time.
  • ACV coverage is appropriate in specific cases — older buildings where the owner plans to demolish rather than rebuild; personal property with low replacement values; properties carried at market value rather than replacement cost.
  • The premium difference shrinks as assets age. Insuring a 15-year-old roof to replacement cost means paying a slightly higher premium to protect against a scenario where the insurer would otherwise deduct 75% of its value. That's often a worthwhile trade.

Functional Replacement Cost: A Middle Ground

Some carriers offer a third option called Functional Replacement Cost — the insurer pays what it costs to replace the damaged property with a functionally equivalent but less expensive modern alternative. A plaster ceiling damaged in a fire might be rebuilt in drywall rather than plaster-for-plaster. The cost is lower, the function is preserved. Worth asking your broker whether this is available on your policy and whether it makes economic sense for your property.

Best practice before renewal: Run your major assets through this calculator using current replacement costs and actual ages. If the depreciation deduction on any item would exceed what you could fund out of pocket in a loss scenario, that's the conversation to have with your broker about upgrading to RCV on that specific coverage line.
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