Guide

Home inventory for insurance claims: what adjusters actually need

Updated July 2026

The short version

  • After a loss, the burden of proof is on you. A claim is a list of what you owned, what it was worth, and evidence for both.
  • Three things per item: a photo, a description (brand/model/serial where it matters), and a value. Receipts strengthen everything.
  • Do it before you need it. An afternoon of photos now beats reconstructing a house from memory after a fire.
  • Store it off-site. An inventory that burns with the house is no inventory at all.

Why a home inventory decides how a claim goes

When you file a contents claim after a fire, flood, burglary, or storm, the insurance company doesn't pay for "everything in the living room." It pays for an itemized list — typically on a proof-of-loss or personal property inventory form — of specific items, each with a description and a value. People who walk in with documentation tend to recover more, faster, with less back-and-forth. People reconstructing from memory routinely forget entire categories of belongings (open a kitchen drawer and count what's in just that one).

What a claim-ready inventory contains

  • A photo of each item. One clear photo proves existence and condition. Wide shots of each room help too — they catch the things you forgot to list.
  • A description. Name, brand, and model where it matters (electronics, appliances, tools). Serial numbers for anything expensive.
  • A value. What it would cost to replace, or its current fair-market value, depending on your policy type (replacement-cost vs. actual-cash-value coverage — check your declarations page).
  • Receipts and documents where you have them. Purchase receipts, appraisals, and warranty papers turn an estimate into evidence. Don't skip items you have no receipt for — a photo and an honest value are still far better than nothing.
  • Quantities. "Dinner plates × 12," not "some plates."

How to build one without losing a weekend

  1. Go room by room, photo-first. Don't type — shoot. Work around each room clockwise, one item at a time, plus a few wide shots.
  2. Open the hiding places. Drawers, closets, the garage, the attic, under the bed. That's where uncounted value lives.
  3. Capture serials on the spot. Flip the item over now, not during a claim.
  4. Put values on things. Estimate honestly. For most household goods, secondhand-market prices are a defensible baseline; for anything unusual or expensive, keep the appraisal with the item.
  5. Flag the high-value items. Jewelry, art, collectibles, and instruments often exceed standard per-category limits and may need to be scheduled (listed individually) on your policy. If an item is worth more than roughly $1,000, ask your insurer whether it needs a rider.
  6. Get it off-site. Cloud storage, or at minimum a copy at work or a relative's house.

Keeping it current

An inventory ages the day you finish it. New purchases, gifts, and things you sell all drift the list away from reality. Two habits keep it honest: add items when they enter the house (a photo takes ten seconds), and do a quick pass when something big changes — a renovation, a move, a holiday's worth of new electronics.

Where OwnWorth fits

OwnWorth is built around exactly this job. You snap a photo and AI identifies the item and estimates its value; a claim-readiness score shows what still needs a photo or a value; receipts, warranties, and appraisals attach to each item; and when you need it, one tap exports a claim-ready inventory book — every item, by room, with photo and value — as a PDF an adjuster can work through. Values even keep themselves current over time. Everything lives in your private household account, off-site by default.

Be ready before the worst day

Photograph a room tonight — OwnWorth turns the photos into a valued, claim-ready inventory.

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