Houston Home Insurance
The age based cap carriers are quietly adding, and the second dial of the Roof Payout Triangle.
Most homeowners know to ask whether their roof is covered for replacement cost. Fewer know about the quieter clause that can sit on top of it, a roof payment schedule that caps the payout by the age of your roof. I see it appear on renewals all the time, often without a word of explanation, so here is what it is and how to decide what to do about it. It is the second of three dials in the Roof Payout Triangle on our contract guide.
This is the kind of clause that worries retirees once they understand it, because it can move thousands of dollars of roof risk back onto the homeowner without the headline premium explaining what changed.
This is decision support, not alarm. Some homeowners are fine with a payment schedule for a lower premium. Others want full replacement cost locked in. The point is to know which one you have before a storm decides it for you.
What is the difference between RCV and a roof payment schedule in Texas?
Replacement Cost Value pays the full cost of a new roof, minus your deductible, no matter how old the roof is. A roof payment schedule pays only a percentage of that cost based on the roof's age, so an older roof is paid far less and you cover the rest plus the deductible.
This is dial two of the Roof Payout Triangle. Carriers are shifting Houston roofs onto schedules to limit storm losses, and the decision it leaves you is whether the schedule is acceptable for your roof's age or worth shopping away from.
A roof payment schedule, sometimes called a roof surfacing payment schedule or a scheduled roof settlement, is an endorsement that pays a set percentage of your roof's repair or replacement cost based on its age. A typical sliding scale might pay close to one hundred percent for a brand new roof, around eighty percent at five years, and only thirty to forty percent once the roof passes fifteen years, with some schedules dropping to about twenty percent on the oldest roofs. Whatever the schedule does not pay, you cover, on top of your deductible.
One detail catches people off guard. Many carriers treat the roof's age as the age of the home unless you can prove it was fully replaced by a qualified contractor, so keep your roofing paperwork. And once a roof passes a certain age, often around fifteen years, the schedule or an Actual Cash Value endorsement can be applied automatically at renewal.
A payment schedule is the second dial. It often sits beside the first, an Actual Cash Value roof settlement, and the third, your wind and hail deductible. When an age based cap and a high percentage deductible land together, a roof claim can pay very little, or nothing. That is why we read all three at once.
The good news is that a schedule is not always permanent. Another carrier may still offer full replacement cost for your roof, and some companies offer a buyback endorsement that restores it. Whether that is worth the added premium depends on your roof's age and condition.
Pull your policy and look for the words roof payment schedule, roof surfacing, or scheduled roof settlement, usually in the endorsements. If you find one, you have a choice to make. On a newer roof you may be happy to trade it for a lower premium. On an older roof, full replacement cost may be worth shopping for while you can still get it.
Because we shop the 50+ top Texas carriers we know well, we can tell you whether replacement cost is still on the table for your roof and what it costs, and about 40 percent of the time we tell a family their current setup is already the right call. The full Roof Payout Triangle lives on our contract guide.
It is an endorsement that replaces full replacement cost with an age based percentage. Instead of paying for a new roof, the insurer pays a set percentage of the cost based on how old your roof is, using a depreciation schedule written into the policy. The older the roof, the smaller the percentage, and you cover the rest plus your deductible.
Replacement Cost Value pays the full cost of a new roof minus your deductible, regardless of the roof's age. A roof payment schedule pays only a percentage tied to age, so a fifteen year old roof might be covered at only thirty or forty percent. RCV protects an older roof far better, while a payment schedule lowers your premium and shifts the risk to you.
It depends on the carrier's schedule and your roof's age, but a typical sliding scale might pay close to one hundred percent for a brand new roof, around eighty percent at five years, and only thirty to forty percent once the roof passes fifteen years. Some schedules drop to about twenty percent on the oldest roofs. The exact numbers are in your endorsement.
Carriers are managing storm losses, and some may move a roof from replacement cost to a payment schedule or Actual Cash Value as the roof ages. The change can appear quietly on a renewal, which is why reading the endorsements every year matters. If your roof was recently and fully replaced, you may be able to document a younger age.
Sometimes. Another carrier may still offer replacement cost for your roof, and some companies offer a buyback that restores it. The right move depends on your roof's age and condition and what the market will offer, which is exactly the kind of thing we shop across the 50+ top Texas carriers we know well.
Read your policy and renewal for terms like roof payment schedule, roof surfacing payment schedule, or scheduled roof settlement. They are often buried in the endorsements. If you find one, or you are not sure, send the policy to us and we will translate it before claim time, not after.
Send us your renewal and we will find the roof settlement clause, tell you what percentage your roof would actually be paid, and whether full replacement cost is still available to you. If your coverage is already sound, we will say so.
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