Basics

What is replacement cost value (RCV) in an insurance claim?

Short answer Replacement cost value (RCV) is what it costs to replace a damaged or lost item with a new one of similar kind and quality at today's prices, before any depreciation is taken out. On a contents claim, RCV is the starting figure for each item. Actual cash value subtracts depreciation for age and wear.

What does RCV mean on a contents claim?

When personal property is damaged or destroyed in a covered loss, the claim needs a value for each item. Replacement cost value is the price to buy that item again, new, at current market prices. It answers a simple question: what would it cost to replace this today?

RCV is item by item. A five-year-old television, a couch, a set of tools, and a kitchen full of small appliances each get their own replacement cost. Added together, they form the contents portion of the claim.

RCV vs actual cash value (ACV)

The two terms often appear on the same claim. The difference is depreciation.

TermWhat it meansTypical amount
Replacement cost value (RCV)Cost to replace the item new, todayHighest
DepreciationReduction for age, wear, and conditionVaries by item
Actual cash value (ACV)RCV minus depreciationLower than RCV

Many policies pay the ACV first, then release the remaining amount, called recoverable depreciation, after the item is actually replaced and proof is submitted. Your policy language is what governs how and when RCV is paid.

How is RCV calculated for each item?

RCV comes from the current price of the same item, or a close equivalent if the exact model is gone. The steps are straightforward, but they add up when a home holds hundreds of items:

  1. Identify the item as specifically as possible, including brand and model.
  2. Find its current price from a reputable retailer.
  3. Record the source so the value can be checked later.
  4. Note quantity, age, and condition for the depreciation step.

Why the evidence behind RCV matters

A number on its own is easy to question. A number with a source, a matching product, and a clear item description is easy to review and accept. Defensible documentation is what keeps a contents claim moving instead of stalling in back and forth.

How ContentsIQ helps

ContentsIQ turns photos and item lists into replacement cost values with the evidence attached: top matches, backup data, and the retailers the price came from. It drafts the values in seconds, and your team reviews and signs off before anything is final. It assists with identification, valuation, and documentation. It does not replace professional judgment, and it is not a public adjuster.

FAQ

Is RCV the amount I get paid?
Not always at first. Many policies pay actual cash value up front, then release the remaining recoverable depreciation once you replace the item and submit proof. Check your policy for the details.
What is the difference between RCV and ACV?
RCV is the cost to replace an item new at today's prices. ACV is RCV minus depreciation for age and condition, so it is lower for used items.
How is RCV determined for each item?
By finding the current price of the same or a comparable item and documenting the source. Clear details such as brand and model make the value more accurate and easier to review.

Value contents faster, with the evidence attached

See how ContentsIQ turns a photo into a defensible replacement cost value.