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Why you should know your property's market value from its replacement cost

Many property owners make the mistake of basing their property's insurance value on its estimated market value because they confuse the two values. In doing so, their property may be over- or under-insured - neither of which is desirable.
Björn Laubscher is MD of Mirfin Valuation Service
Björn Laubscher is MD of Mirfin Valuation Service

Determining replacement value

While an estate agent can determine the value for which your property will likely sell on the open market, an estate agent is not qualified to determine a property’s replacement value. Defined as the value at which your property must be insured to provide sufficient cover, a property’s replacement value can only be assessed by a qualified and experienced professional valuer.

It is important to remember that this professional estimation is based on the cost to demolish and reconstruct the building to the same specifications in the case of total destruction, for example, a fire. This cost must cover the cost to demolish and remove rubble, and include all professional fees, such as services offered by architects and engineers. This worst-case scenario is necessary to ensure that you have sufficient insurance cover for any possible eventuality.

Over-insurance

In most circumstances, a property’s replacement value will be lower than its market value. If the owner uses their property’s market value (for example, R2m) for insurance purposes when the replacement cost is R1.4m, it would result in that property being over-insured with an unnecessarily inflated insurance premium.

Under-insurance

A few years ago, we dealt with a case involving a large home located in a remote rural area. Our valuer assessed the replacement cost to be R3.5m at the time.

The remote location meant that the replacement cost would be on the higher end due to the distance from suppliers of building materials and other goods required in reconstructing a building, increasing the overall replacement cost.

This particular client had his home ‘valued’ by an estate agent for around R1.5m and used this value as the property’s replacement cost for insurance purposes. This means that their property was insured for only R1.5m while it would cost R3.5m to rebuild in the case of total destruction, resulting in the property effectively being under-insured by R2m, or by 57%.

Know your property valuation types to avoid being led astray
Property
Know your property valuation types to avoid being led astray

  23 Oct 2020

The consequence

We have found that an alarming number of property owners are over-insured – often by 50% or more - due to being unaware that they need to obtain insurance cover for their home’s replacement cost and not the market value. You may prefer to rather be over-insured than under-insured, but if you add the unnecessarily increased insurance premium up over a year or two, you have a very prudent reason to get a valuation done to determine an accurate replacement value.

Without a clear understanding of the difference between market value and replacement cost, the property owner may face the undesirable reality where the insurer applies an average at claim stage due to the building being under-insured. This means that the owner’s claims will not be paid out 100%, but rather in proportion to the ration of under-insurance, i.e., if the property is under-insured by 50%, the insurer will only pay half of the claimed amount.

About Björn Laubscher

Björn Laubscher is MD of Mirfin Valuation Service
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