Houston, TX
A clear, honest breakdown of how the appraisal clause works — from invoking your right to a binding award — and what it means for your claim.
When you and your insurance company can’t agree on the amount of a covered loss, you don’t have to accept their number and walk away. Nearly every Texas homeowner and commercial property policy contains an appraisal clause — a structured, private process that puts the dollar figure in the hands of independent experts rather than the insurer’s adjusters. Here’s exactly how it works.
The Process
Before invoking appraisal, confirm two things: (1) your policy contains an appraisal clause (Texas law now requires it for most residential and commercial policies under SB 458), and (2) the dispute is specifically about the amount of loss — not whether the claim is covered at all. Appraisal resolves valuation disagreements, not coverage denials.
Either the policyholder or the insurer may demand appraisal in writing. Your written demand should clearly state that you are invoking the appraisal clause per your policy, reference the policy number, and summarize the disputed amount. Send it via certified mail to create a documented record with a timestamp.
Within the timeframe your policy specifies (typically 20 days), each side names their own appraiser. Your appraiser must be competent and impartial — they advocate for an accurate valuation, not necessarily for you personally. The insurer names theirs. Both appraisers then conduct independent inspections and prepare their own damage estimates.
The two appointed appraisers must jointly select a neutral umpire — a third-party expert who serves as the tiebreaker. If they cannot agree, either party may petition a court to appoint one. The umpire’s role is to review any disagreements between the two appraisers and render an independent opinion on disputed line items.
After their respective inspections, the two appraisers exchange their detailed estimates. Where they agree, those amounts are set. Where they disagree, those disputed items are submitted to the umpire. There is no courtroom, no jury, and no lengthy litigation timeline — this is a private, document-driven process.
An award signed by any two of the three (your appraiser + umpire, or insurer’s appraiser + umpire) becomes the binding appraisal award. The insurer is then obligated to pay the awarded amount, subject to applicable deductibles and policy limits. This is legally enforceable and typically concludes the valuation dispute without litigation.
What You Can Expect
Important: Appraisal Does Not Waive Your Right to Litigate
Completing the appraisal process and accepting an award does not eliminate your right to pursue litigation for coverage issues. Appraisal resolves only the amount of loss — it does not address whether a claim should have been covered in the first place, bad faith conduct by the insurer, improper claim handling, or any other legal rights you may have under Texas law.
If your insurer wrongfully denied coverage, acted in bad faith, or engaged in unfair claim settlement practices, those matters remain fully available for legal action even after an appraisal award has been issued. An appraisal award and a bad faith lawsuit can coexist — and in some circumstances, the award itself serves as evidence of the insurer’s initial underpayment. Always consult a licensed Texas attorney for legal advice specific to your situation.
Ready to Invoke Your Appraisal Rights?
VantixScope provides experienced, independent appraisal services for Texas homeowners and commercial property owners. We know the process — and we know how to document your losses thoroughly.
Request a ConsultationThis article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed Texas attorney for guidance specific to your situation.


