Your engagement ring was appraised at $8,000 five years ago. Today, that same ring would cost $12,000 to replace. But your insurance policy? It's still sitting at that original $8,000 figure, which means you'd be writing a check for $4,000 out of pocket if something happened to it.
Jewelry appraisals aren't just paperwork you file away and forget. They're the foundation of your coverage, and when they go stale, so does your protection.
Standard homeowners and renters insurance policies in Tennessee include some jewelry coverage, but there's usually a cap—often around $1,500 to $2,500 for theft. That covers your everyday pieces, but anything with significant value needs what's called a "scheduled personal property" endorsement or a separate jewelry floater.
When you schedule a piece of jewelry on your policy, you're listing it specifically with its appraised value. The insurance company agrees to cover that item for that amount. No deductible typically applies, and coverage usually extends beyond just theft to include mysterious disappearance, accidental damage, even losing a stone down the drain.
The catch: that coverage amount is locked to whatever your appraisal says. Your policy doesn't automatically adjust for market changes, metal prices, or the fact that skilled jewelers in Nashville are charging more for labor than they did three years ago.
Precious metal and gemstone markets don't stay still. Gold prices have fluctuated dramatically over the past decade. Diamond prices shift based on supply, demand, and changing grading standards. The cost of skilled jewelry craftsmanship has increased as experienced bench jewelers become harder to find.
A piece you had appraised in 2021 exists in a completely different market now in Spring 2026. The platinum in your wedding band, the labor to recreate custom filigree work, the replacement cost for a comparable diamond—all of these variables have moved.
Nashville's jewelry scene has grown significantly, with established jewelers in Green Hills, newer independent designers in East Nashville, and estate jewelry specialists throughout the city. Any of them can tell you: replacement costs for quality pieces have risen faster than most people expect.
Most insurance companies and jewelry professionals recommend updating appraisals every two to three years. Some insurers require it for continued full coverage. Others will honor an older appraisal but might limit your payout to actual cash value (what your worn piece is worth today) rather than replacement cost (what it would take to buy something comparable new).
Check your policy language. Some carriers send reminders when appraisals are aging out. Others don't, and you won't know there's a problem until you file a claim.
If your last appraisal is older than three years, you're likely underinsured. If it's older than five years, the gap could be substantial.
A proper jewelry appraisal for insurance purposes should come from a certified appraiser—look for credentials like GIA (Gemological Institute of America) graduate gemologist or ASA (American Society of Appraisers) accreditation. Many Nashville jewelers offer appraisal services, though some charge fees while others include appraisals with purchases or cleanings.
Expect to pay somewhere between $50 and $150 per piece for a thorough insurance appraisal. The appraiser should examine the piece, photograph it, document all specifications, and provide a written replacement value based on current market conditions.
Keep copies of your appraisals outside your home—a safe deposit box, cloud storage, or with your insurance agent. If your jewelry is stolen or your house catches fire, you'll need that documentation for your claim.
Your claim gets paid based on your policy terms, and those terms are tied to your scheduled value. If you've got a $10,000 ring scheduled for $7,000 because your appraisal is from 2020, you're getting $7,000.
Some policies include an inflation adjustment, but it's usually modest—maybe 2% annually—and nowhere close to how fast actual jewelry replacement costs have moved in recent years.
The insurance company isn't trying to shortchange you. They're paying exactly what the policy says. The problem happened years ago when the appraisal wasn't updated and the coverage wasn't adjusted.
Pull out your homeowners or renters policy and find your scheduled personal property endorsement. Look at each piece listed and ask yourself: when was this appraised? Is this amount still realistic?
Then call your jeweler or find a certified appraiser in Nashville to update anything that's more than three years old. Once you have current appraisals, contact your insurance agent to adjust your coverage amounts.
Yes, your premium will go up when you increase the scheduled value. But the premium increase is typically modest compared to the coverage gap you'd face with a claim. Paying an extra $30 or $40 a year to properly insure a piece worth thousands more than your policy shows—that math works out pretty clearly.
Your grandmother's vintage ring, your anniversary earrings, that custom piece from a Nashville designer—these aren't just objects. They're irreplaceable in ways that go beyond money. Making sure your coverage reflects their actual value is one of those small tasks that matters enormously when something goes wrong.
Insurance Agent
As a dedicated State Farm Insurance Agent in Nashville, TN, I specialize in helping individuals and businesses create customized coverage plans...
Nashville, Tennessee
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