Category:
Claims Process & Contractor Experience
Last updated: March 2026 • Informational only (not legal advice)
Quick answer: Replacement typically follows this path: diagnosis → “not repairable” determination → provider authorization → replacement option approval → scheduling/installation. Your contract’s caps, exclusions, and “equivalent replacement” language control the outcome.
Step 1: Diagnosis and “not repairable” decision
Replacement usually starts after a technician documents that the item can’t be repaired reasonably (for example, parts unavailable,
repeated failure, or repair cost/feasibility issues). The provider typically reviews the diagnosis before authorizing replacement.
Step 2: Authorization (the approval step that affects timing)
- The contractor submits diagnosis notes and recommended resolution (repair vs replace).
- The provider reviews for coverage: covered item + covered failure + exclusions check.
- If approved, the claim moves into a replacement workflow (provider-specific).
Most delays: authorization review, parts/availability, and scheduling—especially for high-demand trades like HVAC.
Step 3: Replacement options (“equivalent” and availability)
Many contracts use language like “equivalent” or “similar” replacement. In practice, replacement can involve:
- Replacing with a comparable model currently available
- Replacing only specific components rather than the entire unit (if feasible)
- Applying a credit/allowance up to the coverage cap (plan-specific)
Step 4: Caps and out-of-pocket costs (the most important reality check)
Even when replacement is approved, your out-of-pocket can include:
- Service fee (paid per claim/visit, plan-specific)
- Amount above the coverage cap (if replacement exceeds the limit)
- Non-covered related costs (permits, code upgrades, haul-away, access, modifications—contract-specific)
If you haven’t read these yet, they clarify the two biggest cost drivers:
- Coverage Caps 101: The #1 Reason “Covered” Still Costs You Money
- Out-of-Pocket Costs to Watch: Permits, Haul‑Away, and Code Upgrades
Step 5: Scheduling and installation
- Once the replacement option is confirmed, installation is scheduled.
- Timeline depends on product availability and contractor calendars.
- If the job requires permits or code-related upgrades, clarify who handles them and whether they’re covered.
What to ask (so you don’t get surprised later)
- What is the coverage cap for this item under my plan?
- Is replacement handled as equivalent replacement, an allowance, or a specific model?
- Which costs are excluded (permits, code upgrades, haul-away, access, modifications)?
- What is the estimated timeline from approval to installation?
- Will I receive a written breakdown of covered vs out-of-pocket costs?
Related reading (recommended)
- Home Warranty Claims Process: What Happens After You File a Claim (and What to Document)
- Browse: Claims Process & Contractor Experience
- Home Warranty Costs Explained: Premiums, Service Fees, and Coverage Caps
- Why Home Warranty Claims Get Denied: Exclusions, Fine Print, and How to Read a Contract
- Home Warranty Index
Read Next (Recommended)
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