When Reconstruction Should Match Pre-loss Condition (And When It Should Not)
Insurance reconstruction puts your Harrison property back to pre-loss condition. Not better, not worse โ pre-loss. That's the standard, that's what the carrier pays for, and that's what our reconstruction scope delivers by default. But there are scenarios where the homeowner sensibly wants to upgrade during the rebuild, and the timing creates an opportunity worth taking.
The case for upgrading: the contractor is already on-site, the demo work is already done, the framing is already exposed, and disruption to daily life is already happening. Adding upgrades to the rebuild scope adds incremental cost but doesn't add new disruption. Common upgrade decisions during reconstruction: replacing carpet with LVP or hardwood, upgrading kitchen cabinet level, adding under-cabinet lighting, replacing toilet/vanity, repainting adjacent unaffected rooms to a fresh color.
The case for staying with pre-loss: the insurance scope covers what the loss damaged. Upgrades are out-of-pocket. If cash flow is tight, defer upgrades to a future remodel project. If the timing is wrong (you're planning to sell within 12-18 months), upgrade ROI may not justify the cost.
We quote upgrades as separate line items on top of the insurance scope so you can decide whether the timing makes sense. Either way, the insurance work proceeds at carrier-approved scope and pricing.