The Post-Storm Appliance Damage Assessment Checklist (For Adjusters, Restoration, and Homeowners)
After a major storm or flood, insurance adjusters and restoration contractors need to document appliance loss with brand, model, serial, manufacturing date, and pre-event condition — fast. This checklist runs the field workflow: photograph the label, OCR-decode it, capture decoded age and pre-event remaining life, and produce a defensible loss schedule.
The Documentation Problem After a Major Storm
Post-storm appliance documentation has a fundamental tension: you need to be fast (the insured is displaced, the adjuster has a hundred sites) and you need to be precise (ACV calculations depend on manufacturing date, which determines depreciation). Traditionally, these two requirements conflict — getting precise age data requires tracking down serial numbers, decoding them, and cross-referencing category lifespan data. That takes 10–20 minutes per appliance manually.
With OCR + ApplianceIQ, it takes under 60 seconds per appliance: photograph the label → decode manufacturing date, recall status, and ACV-relevant remaining life → add to the loss schedule. For a 10-appliance home, this is 10 minutes of field work instead of 2+ hours.
The Field Checklist
For each appliance in the affected property:
- Photograph the appliance label (include a clear image of model and serial numbers)
- Photograph overall appliance condition (flood line, visible damage, corrosion)
- Note appliance location (kitchen, laundry room, utility closet)
- Run ApplianceIQ OCR lookup: model + serial → manufacturing date + recall status + remaining life estimate
- Note functional status: operating, non-operating, or unknown (do not test flood-affected electrical appliances)
- Record pre-event condition basis: prior maintenance records, tenant reports, or "estimated good condition for age" based on remaining life data
Safety note: Do not power on any appliance that may have been exposed to flood water until it has been inspected by a licensed electrician. Document condition from visual inspection only.
OCR-on-Phone Workflow
The fastest field documentation workflow:
- Open ApplianceIQ on your phone
- Photograph the appliance label
- ApplianceIQ OCR extracts model + serial and runs the lookup
- Results (manufacturing date, age, recall status, remaining life) appear in 15–30 seconds
- Tap "Export" to add to your loss schedule spreadsheet or claims platform
For adjusters processing multiple sites: the ApplianceIQ mobile workflow can export a completed appliance manifest (all 12 data fields per unit) in CSV format at the end of each site visit — ready to import into your claims platform.
Depreciation Math: ACV vs. RCV
Most property insurance policies cover appliances on an Actual Cash Value (ACV) basis — replacement cost minus depreciation. Manufacturing date is the key input to ACV calculation:
ACV formula: ACV = Replacement Cost × (1 − (Appliance Age / Category Median Lifespan))
Example: GE refrigerator, manufactured June 2016, current age ~10 years, category median 13 years. Replacement cost: $1,200.
ACV = $1,200 × (1 − (10/13)) = $1,200 × 0.23 = $276 ACV
Replacement Cost Value (RCV) policies pay the full $1,200. The manufacturing date determines which number applies to ACV policies — and whether the ACV is calculated correctly.
An incorrectly decoded manufacturing date that makes the refrigerator appear 12 years old instead of 10 would produce an ACV of $92 — a $184 underpayment. At scale across a catastrophe claim, date accuracy is a significant issue.
Sample Loss Schedule Format
| Appliance | Brand/Model | Serial | Mfg Date | Age (yrs) | Repl. Cost | ACV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Refrigerator | GE GSS25GSHSS | HR618427 | May 2018 | 8 | $1,400 | $572 |
| Dishwasher | Bosch SHPM88Z75N | FD9502/0045100 | Feb 2015 | 11 | $900 | $0 (past median) |
| Washer | Samsung WF45T6000AW | 0H9E4ABTA00271L | May 2021 | 5 | $900 | $450 |
| Dryer | Samsung DV45T6000AW | 0H9E4ABVB00187K | May 2021 | 5 | $800 | $492 |
| Range | Whirlpool WFG320M0BS | R84421905 | Aug 2020 | 5.5 | $700 | $443 |
Recall Interaction
A flood-damaged appliance that is also under an active recall has a different claims path. The manufacturer's recall remedy may cover the unit independently of the insurance claim. Best practice:
- Document recall status in the loss schedule (ApplianceIQ returns this automatically)
- Flag recalled units as "manufacturer remedy may apply — verify before settling"
- Inform the homeowner that they have a separate recall remedy channel in addition to the insurance claim
- Coordinate between the insurance claim and the recall remedy to avoid double-payment or gaps
Insurance Acceptance Criteria
Most carriers require for each appliance entry in a storm loss schedule: brand, model number, serial number, documented manufacturing date (with source), and a pre-event condition assessment. ApplianceIQ's output satisfies all five requirements and includes source attribution (which databases were queried) — meeting the audit trail standard most carriers require for catastrophe claims over $25,000.