Quick answer: A high-value home is generally one with a replacement cost around $1 million or more, or one with features a standard policy cannot properly cover, custom construction, significant valuables, or elevated liability exposure. It is defined by the cost to rebuild it and the complexity of its risk, not by its market price.
It Is About Replacement Cost, Not List Price
Many homeowners assume “high-value” refers to an expensive purchase price. In insurance terms, what matters is the cost to rebuild your home to its original specification and to replace its contents, figures that, for a luxury property with custom materials and craftsmanship, often exceed market value. Standard homeowners policies are built for mass-market homes and tend to underinsure these properties and cap the categories that matter most.
Signs Your Home Needs High-Value Coverage
- Replacement cost of roughly $1 million or more
- Custom or architect-designed construction and high-end finishes
- Significant collections, fine art, jewelry, wine, or antiques
- Features like a pool, dock, or domestic staff that raise liability
- A public profile that increases lawsuit exposure
- Historic character or a second or vacation home
Why Standard Policies Fall Short
A standard policy pays actual cash value, caps valuables at low sublimits, and rarely reflects true rebuild cost. A high-value policy is designed around guaranteed or extended replacement cost, agreed-value coverage for valuables, and high-limit liability. See our guide on high-value vs. standard homeowners insurance and how dwelling coverage is calculated.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a high-value home defined by market value or rebuild cost?
By rebuild cost. Insurance is concerned with the cost to reconstruct your home and replace its contents, which for luxury properties often exceeds market value.
Is there a dollar threshold?
There is no universal cutoff, but coverage is typically appropriate once replacement cost reaches roughly $1 million, or when valuables exceed standard policy sublimits.
Can a smaller home still qualify?
Yes. A modest-sized home with significant valuables, custom features, or high liability exposure can still need high-value coverage.
I have valuable jewelry but a modest home, do I need it?
Possibly. If your valuables exceed standard sublimits, high-value coverage with scheduled personal property may be the right fit even if the dwelling itself is not large.