TL;DR: Replacement cost coverage pays to rebuild or replace damaged property at today's prices, while actual cash value subtracts depreciation — meaning you get less. The difference can be tens of thousands of dollars on a claim, and most San Antonio homeowners don't know which one they carry until it's too late.
A hailstorm rolls through Stone Oak and puts your roof out of commission. You file a claim. And then you find out your policy pays based on what your roof is worth today — not what it costs to replace it.
That's the difference between replacement cost and actual cash value, and for San Antonio homeowners, it's one of the most important lines in your entire policy. With spring storm season in full swing this time of year, it's worth understanding exactly how your home is covered before the next cell pops up on radar over Loop 1604.
Replacement cost coverage (RCV) pays what it actually costs to repair or replace damaged property using materials of similar kind and quality, at current prices. If a storm destroys your roof, RCV covers the cost of a brand-new roof — no matter how old yours was.
Actual cash value (ACV) starts with that same replacement cost, then subtracts depreciation. Depreciation is basically wear and tear over time. A roof with a 30-year lifespan that's 15 years old? An ACV policy might only pay out around half the cost of a new one.
Here's a simplified comparison:
| | Replacement Cost (RCV) | Actual Cash Value (ACV) | |---|---|---| | What it pays | Cost to repair/replace at today's prices | Cost to replace minus depreciation | | Roof example (15 years old, $20,000 to replace) | Up to $20,000 (minus deductible) | Roughly $10,000 (minus deductible) | | Monthly premium | Typically higher | Typically lower | | Out-of-pocket after a claim | Usually lower | Usually significantly higher |
That gap — potentially $10,000 or more just on a roof — comes straight out of your pocket if you carry ACV coverage.
San Antonio sits right in the crosshairs of hail, wind, and severe thunderstorms every spring and summer. Many Northwest Side neighborhoods — from Helotes to Shavano Park to Alamo Ranch — see hail damage regularly enough that roofing crews practically set up camp along Bandera Road and IH-10 after every major storm.
Texas homeowners already pay some of the highest premiums in the country because of weather exposure. On top of that, Texas policies often carry percentage-based wind/hail deductibles (usually 1% or 2% of your dwelling coverage). Combine a percentage deductible with an ACV payout, and a homeowner can be left covering a massive chunk of repair costs themselves.
Material and labor prices in the San Antonio market have climbed in recent years too. A roof replacement that cost $12,000 a decade ago might run $18,000–$25,000 now, depending on the home. RCV keeps pace with those costs. ACV doesn't.
Replacement cost vs. actual cash value applies to more than roofing. It affects how your policy handles:
That last one catches people off guard. If your policy covers personal property at ACV, that five-year-old couch ruined by a burst pipe gets valued at what a used five-year-old couch is worth — not what a new replacement costs. The Texas Department of Insurance has helpful resources on what standard homeowners policies in Texas typically cover and how to read your declarations page.
Some policies use replacement cost for the structure but actual cash value for personal property, or vice versa. It's worth checking both.
Pull up your homeowners policy declarations page — it's usually the first few pages of your policy documents. Look for language around "Loss Settlement" or "Valuation."
Key things to look for:
If you're not sure what you're reading, that's completely normal. Insurance documents aren't exactly light weekend reading. A licensed agent can walk you through your dec page in about ten minutes and show you exactly where you stand.
Many carriers allow you to upgrade from actual cash value to replacement cost coverage outside of your renewal period. The premium increase varies — it depends on your home's age, location, and construction — but for most San Antonio homeowners, the additional monthly cost is modest compared to the potential out-of-pocket difference on a major claim.
If your home is in a newer development like parts of Alamo Ranch or the Helotes corridor, replacement cost coverage tends to be straightforward since the home's age works in your favor. Older homes in established neighborhoods like Castle Hills or Leon Valley may have more factors to consider, especially if the home has original systems or unique construction.
Storm season doesn't wait for you to get organized. If you haven't looked at your policy since you closed on your home — or since your last renewal auto-generated and you filed it away — now's the time. Grab your dec page, check whether you're carrying replacement cost or actual cash value on both your dwelling and personal property, and make sure you understand your wind/hail deductible.
Fifteen minutes now beats a surprise five-figure bill after the next storm rolls through.
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