Coverage Caps 101: The #1 Reason “Covered” Still Costs You Money

Last updated: March 2026 • Informational only (not legal advice)

Bottom line: A plan can approve your claim and still leave you paying a lot out of pocket—because of coverage caps (limits).

Quick answer

A coverage cap (also called a limit) is the maximum amount a home warranty plan will pay for a covered item—usually per item, per claim, and/or per contract term. If your repair or replacement costs more than the cap, you typically pay the difference.

Why caps are the most overlooked “fine print”

  • Marketing pages often say “covers HVAC” or “covers plumbing,” but caps define how much the plan pays.
  • Two plans can look identical until you compare caps for the specific items you care about.
  • Caps can vary by item type (HVAC vs water heater vs refrigerator) and by plan tier.

Common cap formats you may see

  • Per-item cap: “Up to $X for HVAC per contract term.”
  • Per-claim cap: “Up to $X per covered claim.”
  • Aggregate cap: “Up to $X total for all covered items per year/term.”
  • Tiered caps: different limits for systems vs appliances, or for specific appliances.

Example math (why “covered” can still cost you)

Here’s the simple way to think about it:

Out-of-pocket ≈ service fee + (total cost − coverage cap) + any excluded charges

Excluded charges vary by contract and may include things like permits, code upgrades, special access, haul-away, or non-covered parts.

Where to find caps (fast)

  1. Open the provider’s sample contract for the exact plan tier you’re considering.
  2. Search within the document for: “limit,” “cap,” “maximum,” “up to,” “aggregate”.
  3. Check both the systems section and the appliances section—caps are often listed separately.
  4. Confirm whether caps reset per year or per contract term.

How to compare two plans (caps-first method)

  1. List your top 3 “risk items” (example: HVAC, water heater, refrigerator).
  2. Write down each plan’s cap for those items.
  3. Factor in the service fee (per claim).
  4. Skim exclusions for extra charges tied to those items.
  5. Choose the plan that fits your risk items—not the one with the prettiest marketing page.

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