The claims process is designed for professionals. Here is how it actually works, and what you can do to make sure it works for you.
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Your insurance policy covers the value of what you lost. But the burden of proving what you lost falls entirely on you.
After a fire, flood, or break-in, your insurance company assigns an adjuster. That adjuster asks you for a complete list of everything you lost: every piece of furniture, every appliance, every piece of clothing, every tool in the garage, every item in every room.
You are in shock. You are displaced. You are trying to remember what was in your kitchen drawers, what brand your TV was, how many pairs of shoes you owned. You forget dozens of items. You underestimate values. You have no photos, no serial numbers, no receipts.
The adjuster is a professional. This is what they do every day. They are trained to control payouts. You are doing this for the first time, under the worst possible circumstances.
Most homeowners accept the first settlement offer. Most of those settlements are significantly less than what the homeowner was actually owed. This is not a failure of insurance. It is a failure of documentation.
Insurance adjusters evaluate every claim on a scale from strongest to weakest evidence. Where you land on this scale determines how much you get paid.
The gold standard. Claims with this level of documentation are processed fastest and paid at the highest values. A professional home inventory places most of your items here.
Credible supporting evidence. A professional home inventory with dated photos and organized descriptions typically places you here or at the top tier for items without receipts.
Helpful but incomplete. Adjusters may accept some items at this level, challenge or reduce others. You are negotiating for every dollar.
This is where most homeowners without documentation end up. You are asking the insurance company to take your word for it. They are trained not to. Items at this level are routinely reduced or denied.
Your policy uses one of two methods to determine your payout. Understanding the difference is critical because documentation affects both.
ACV
Pays the depreciated value of the item at the time of loss. A five-year-old $2,000 sofa might pay $1,000 to $1,400.
Without documentation, adjusters estimate age and condition conservatively. That always works in their favor, not yours. Condition notes and dated photos from a home inventory give you evidence to dispute unfavorable depreciation.
RCV
Pays what it costs to replace the item new. But there is a catch most homeowners do not know about.
The insurer first pays the ACV amount. You must then actually buy the replacement and submit receipts to collect the remaining depreciation. Many homeowners leave thousands on the table because they never complete this step. Accurate item descriptions from a home inventory determine what qualifies as a comparable replacement.
Your standard homeowner's policy has built-in caps on certain categories. No matter how good your documentation is, you cannot recover more than these limits without a special endorsement on your policy.
| Category | Standard Limit | Applies To |
|---|---|---|
| Jewelry, watches, furs | $1,500 | Theft claims only |
| Firearms | $2,500 | Theft claims only |
| Silverware / goldware | $2,500 | Theft claims only |
| Computers | $1,500 | Varies by carrier |
| Musical instruments | $2,500 | Varies by carrier |
| Fine art | $2,500 | Varies by carrier |
What this means for you:
If Lisa Nguyen owned $14,000 in jewelry and it was stolen, her policy would only pay $1,500. To recover above these limits, she would need a scheduled personal property endorsement added to her policy, paired with a current professional appraisal for each item. Most homeowners do not know these limits exist until they file a claim and find out the hard way.
You walk in with organized evidence instead of a memory and a wish list
Nothing gets forgotten because every room and every significant item is already accounted for
Your claim gets processed faster because the documentation is already done
Depreciation disputes are reduced because item condition is documented with dated photos
You know about sublimits before a loss, not after, giving you time to add endorsements
You have leverage because you are not negotiating from memory under pressure
Las Vegas has unique risk factors that make home inventory documentation especially critical for local homeowners.
chance of being a property crime victim in Las Vegas in any given year
higher property crime rate than the national average
how much Nevada property crime increased in 2024 while the national average decreased 9%
Las Vegas has one of the higher property crime rates in the country. Burglary, theft, and break-ins are real and ongoing risks for homeowners in this area. Nevada is one of the only states where property crime went up in 2024 while the national average went down.
When something happens to your home or your belongings, the question is not whether you have insurance. The question is whether you can prove what you lost. That is exactly what a home inventory does.
If you are reading this page, the answer is now. But here are the moments that push most homeowners to act.
After a neighbor experiences a fire, flood, or break-in
When buying or moving into a new home
After a major purchase (appliances, furniture, electronics)
When renewing or updating your homeowner's insurance policy
After a burglary or break-in in your neighborhood
When thinking about estate planning or asset protection
Insurance adjusters evaluate claim documentation on a scale from strongest to weakest. The strongest evidence includes original purchase receipts, professional appraisals, and serial numbers. Next are bank or credit card statements, dated photos, and warranty cards. Below that are delivery confirmations, gift receipts, and social media photos. The weakest is self-reported statements and witness testimony. A professional home inventory places your documentation at the top of this scale for most items.
ACV (Actual Cash Value) pays the depreciated value of an item at the time of loss. RCV (Replacement Cost Value) pays what it costs to replace the item new, but in two steps: first the insurer pays ACV, then reimburses the remaining depreciation once you purchase a replacement and submit receipts. Many homeowners with RCV policies leave money on the table because they never complete the replacement and receipt step. Documentation quality affects both methods.
Sublimits are built-in caps that limit payouts for certain categories regardless of documentation. Common sublimits include $1,500 for jewelry (theft only), $2,500 for firearms (theft only), and $1,500 for computers. To recover above these limits, you need a scheduled personal property endorsement on your policy with a current professional appraisal for each item.
A scheduled personal property endorsement, sometimes called an inland marine floater, is an add-on to your homeowner’s policy that provides coverage for specific high-value items above the standard sublimits. You schedule individual items with their appraised values. Your insurance agent can add this to your policy, and a current professional appraisal is usually required for each item.
A home inventory is most effective when created before a loss. If you have already experienced a loss, a professional inventory of your remaining property can help document what you still own, but it cannot prove what was lost. The strongest position is always to have documentation in place before you need it.
Depreciation reduces your payout based on the age and condition of each item. Without documentation, adjusters estimate both conservatively, which works in the insurer’s favor. A professional home inventory with condition notes and dated photos gives you evidence to dispute unfavorable depreciation and support a more accurate payout.
No. We are a documentation service, not an appraisal firm. For standard household items we provide estimated replacement values based on current retail pricing. For high-value items above $2,000 to $5,000, we flag the item and recommend a professional appraisal. We can refer you to credentialed local specialists such as GIA gemologists for jewelry or USPAP-compliant appraisers for fine art and antiques.
The best time to do this was the day you moved in. The second best time is today.
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