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What a Reinstatement Cost Assessment Covers

A practical guide for building owners, managing agents and property stakeholders on what a reinstatement cost assessment involves and why it matters.

Practical Guide April 2026 Building Surveying
Overview

An accurate reinstatement cost assessment ensures the right level of buildings insurance cover

For building owners and managing agents, understanding what a reinstatement cost assessment covers and when it should be updated is essential for avoiding underinsurance and ensuring the declared value is defensible.

Why reinstatement cost assessments matter

A reinstatement cost assessment estimates the cost of rebuilding a property from the ground up in the event of total loss. This figure is used to set the sum insured on buildings insurance policies. If the declared value is too low, the building may be underinsured. If it is too high, the owner may be paying more in premiums than necessary.

An accurate assessment ensures appropriate cover and avoids the risk of inadequate insurance.

When a reinstatement cost assessment is needed

Common trigger points include where the existing declared value has not been reviewed for several years, where the building has been extended, altered or refurbished, where insurance renewal requires an updated valuation, where a managing agent or freeholder needs a defensible basis for the sum insured, where a leaseholder or stakeholder has queried the declared value, and where a portfolio of buildings needs consistent, up-to-date valuations.

What the assessment covers

The assessment includes inspection of the building to record its construction type, size, materials and specification. The surveyor calculates the estimated cost of demolition and rebuilding to current building regulations and standards, including professional fees, site clearance, statutory requirements and any relevant special features.

The output is a written report with a recommended reinstatement figure.

Who normally instructs this work

Building owners, managing agents, freeholders, housing associations, commercial landlords, educational institutions and public sector estates teams. The instruction is often prompted by insurance renewal, a change in building use or a significant period since the last formal assessment.

Common mistakes to avoid

Using market value or purchase price as a proxy for reinstatement cost. Not updating the assessment after significant alterations or building works. Relying on index-linked increases without a periodic formal reassessment. Not considering the cost of compliance with current building regulations in the rebuild estimate.

Next Steps

Where this usually links to live instructions

Reviewed by Savas Bulduk BSc (Hons) MRICS, Chartered Building Surveyor and Director at Hampstead Chartered Surveyors & Building Consultancy.