Appraisal is a policy-based process used mainly in property insurance to resolve disputes about the amount of loss.
Why It Matters
When the insurer and insured agree that a loss is covered but disagree on value, appraisal can provide a structured way to resolve the amount without turning every dispute into a full lawsuit.
How It Works in Real U.S. Insurance Practice
Property policies often include an appraisal condition. Each side selects an appraiser, and the appraisers select an umpire. If the appraisers disagree, the umpire helps resolve the amount. Appraisal usually focuses on valuation, not broad coverage disputes, fraud allegations, or legal interpretation of the policy. The exact scope varies by wording and state law.
Because appraisal can materially affect claim payment, it is a practical tool in homeowners, commercial property, and other first-party property settings where value disputes are common. It also changes leverage in a claim. Once appraisal is invoked, the discussion often shifts away from general argument and toward competing valuations, scopes of repair, depreciation assumptions, and supporting estimates.
| Dispute type | Is appraisal usually the right tool? | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Amount of repair or replacement cost | Usually yes | The process is built around competing valuations |
| Whether the policy covers the loss at all | Usually no | Coverage interpretation is often outside appraisal |
| Fraud or intentional misrepresentation | Usually no | Those issues usually require broader factual or legal resolution |
| Scope of covered damage after coverage is accepted | Often yes, depending on wording and state law | The dispute may still be framed as amount of loss |
Practical Example
After a hail loss, the insurer and business owner may agree that roof damage is covered but disagree on repair cost. They can invoke appraisal to determine the amount of loss even while other legal issues remain outside the appraisal process.
The same pattern shows up in homeowners claims when the insurer and insured both accept that storm damage occurred but disagree over whether the loss supports patch repair, partial replacement, or full replacement.
Common Misunderstandings or Close Contrasts
- Appraisal is not the same as arbitration in every respect.
- It usually addresses amount of loss, not every coverage issue.
- Invoking appraisal does not necessarily mean either side admitted every element of the claim.
FAQ
Can appraisal decide whether the policy covers the loss at all?
Knowledge Check
If the insurer and insured agree that storm damage is covered but sharply dispute replacement cost, is appraisal usually aimed at coverage or at valuation?
It is usually aimed at valuation. Appraisal is generally the amount-of-loss tool, not the forum for every broader coverage disagreement.