Recovery
The amount of money an insurer recovers from third parties, salvage sales, or other sources after paying a claim, reducing the net cost of the claim.
Whether you work as a surveyor in India or an adjuster in the United States, you will encounter Recovery regularly. It refers to the amount of money an insurer recovers from third parties, salvage sales, or other sources after paying a claim, reducing the net cost of the claim.
What Role Does Recovery Play in Claims Processing?
The claims process has multiple stages: initial notification (FNOL), assignment, investigation, documentation, assessment, negotiation, and settlement. Recovery intersects with several of these stages and affects how quickly and accurately a claim moves through the pipeline.
For an independent adjuster handling a residential fire claim in the US, or an IRDAI-licensed surveyor investigating a commercial property loss in India, recovery shapes the workflow at the ground level. The adjuster inspecting a fire-damaged home needs to document the cause of loss, photograph every affected room, record measurements, and calculate repair costs. How recovery is handled at each step determines the quality of the final report.
How Do Field Professionals Handle Recovery in Practice?
In the field, recovery requires systematic documentation. A surveyor arriving at a loss site follows a specific workflow:
- Review the appointment letter and policy details before arriving at the site
- Conduct a thorough physical inspection, photographing damage from multiple angles
- Record observations related to recovery using voice notes or written documentation
- Collect supporting documents from the policyholder (invoices, receipts, maintenance records)
- Cross-reference findings with the policy terms to determine coverage applicability
- Calculate the loss amount with itemized breakdowns and supporting evidence
The average property claim takes 3 to 5 hours of field work followed by another 2 to 4 hours of desk work to prepare the report. During catastrophe events, adjusters may need to inspect 8 to 12 properties per day, making efficient handling of recovery even more important.
What Are the Regulatory Requirements Around Recovery?
In India, IRDAI regulations prescribe specific timelines and formats for claims documentation. The IRDAI (Insurance Surveyors and Loss Assessors) Regulations require surveyors to submit preliminary reports within a fixed timeframe and final reports within 30 to 45 days. Recovery must be documented according to IRDAI-prescribed formats.
In the US, each state has its own claims handling regulations. The Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act (model law by NAIC) requires insurers to acknowledge claims within 15 days, begin investigation within 15 days, and affirm or deny coverage within a reasonable time. Adjusters must document recovery in compliance with these state-specific requirements.
How Can AI Tools Improve Recovery Documentation?
Traditional claims documentation involves handwritten notes, separate photo uploads, manual report typing, and hours of desk work after the field inspection. AI-powered tools like FieldScribe AI change this by allowing adjusters to capture everything in real time.
With voice-to-report technology, the adjuster dictates observations about recovery while inspecting the property. GPS coordinates are automatically tagged to every photograph. Policy terms are extracted using AI and cross-referenced against the field findings. The final report is generated automatically in a carrier-compliant format, cutting documentation time from hours to minutes. This is particularly valuable during catastrophe deployments where claim volume spikes dramatically.
For surveyors and adjusters building their careers, strong command of recovery principles and efficient documentation practices sets professionals apart. Those who combine deep claims knowledge with modern AI tools consistently deliver better results for their clients and the insurance companies they serve.
Related Terms
Subrogation
The right of an insurer, after paying a claim, to step into the shoes of the policyholder and pursue recovery from the third party responsible for the loss.
Salvage
The remaining value of damaged property after a loss, which the insurer may recover by selling the damaged items to offset the claim payment.
Contribution
The principle that when two or more policies cover the same loss, each insurer pays a proportionate share of the claim so the insured does not profit from the loss.