Under NFIP’s Risk Rating 2.0, RCV has become a formal rating input for many flood policies. That means helping your clients keep their building valuations accurate is more important than ever. In fact, due to federal regulations, it’s become required standard practice to recertify RCVs for NFIP flood policies every three years.
Longstanding requirement: RCBAPs have always required a verified replacement cost valuation. Associations are familiar with the need to document and update values to avoid coinsurance issues.
April 1, 2022 onward: NFIP extended the requirement to Other Residential and Non-Residential policies with new business and renewals on or after this date.
Three-year recertification: NFIP guidance specifies that BRCV must be revalidated every 3 years. Updated documentation must be obtained and reviewed before the renewal billing period in the third year.
Why three years? According to FEMA, this requirement balances administrative burden with accuracy. Construction costs shift quickly, and a three-year cycle helps ensure your clients don’t drift into underinsurance.
While the three-year rule pertains to certain policies with the NFIP, private carriers have their own requirements. Some carriers mandate recertification on an annual basis while others allow a rolling adjustment unless a major renovation is reported. With this in mind, it is important for agents to track RCV recertification requirements based on both the policy type and the insurance carrier.
|
Policy / Occupancy Type |
Recertification Required? |
Renewal / Trigger Date |
Notes |
|
Non-Residential / General Property (commercial) |
Yes |
Renewals on or after April 1, 2022 |
Must revalidate every 3 years |
|
Other Residential (multi-family, large residential) |
Yes |
Renewals on or after April 1, 2022 |
Must revalidate every 3 years |
|
RCBAP (Condo Association) |
Yes |
All renewal dates |
Requirement predates Risk Rating 2.0 |
|
Single-Family Dwelling |
No |
— |
Not subject to the 3-year rule |
|
Manufactured/Mobile Home |
No |
— |
Same as above |
|
Residential Unit Policy (individual unit) |
No |
— |
Same as above |
|
2–4 Family Buildings |
No |
— |
Same as above |
Claims settlement: If the replacement cost value (RCV) isn’t kept up to date, your clients risk smaller claim payouts and unexpected deductions. Accurate RCV helps ensure they get the coverage they expect and avoids costly surprises at claim time.
Premium accuracy: With Risk Rating 2.0, RCV is used as a variable in rating. Outdated values can misprice your client’s premium.
Compliance: Lenders require flood insurance that equals the lesser of the loan balance, NFIP maximum, or RCV. If the RCV isn’t current, your client’s coverage may not meet regulatory requirements.
By building a process to track and revalidate RCV, you’re not just staying compliant, you’re strengthening client trust and ensuring their flood coverage truly protects them.
✅ Action Step for Agents: Review your renewal pipeline now. Identify which clients are coming up on their third renewal and start the revalidation conversation early.