Reconstruction Materials and Matching: Like Kind and Quality Standards in Property Insurance Claims
No aspect of residential reconstruction generates more insurance claim disputes than the materials selection and matching questions that arise when damaged materials must be replaced. The carrier wants to pay for a repair that is functional. The homeowner has a right — written into their replacement cost value policy — to a repair that is aesthetically uniform and equivalent in quality to what they had before the loss. Between “functional” and “equivalent in quality and appearance,” there is frequently a significant gap that becomes the battleground of the reconstruction claim.
Understanding the like kind and quality (LKQ) standard, the matching doctrine as applied by courts and regulators in major states, how to document matching claims, and how material substitution questions are resolved in the Xactimate estimating context gives both homeowners and restoration contractors the framework to recover the full cost of restoration without leaving money on the table or accepting a lesser result than the policy promises.
The Like Kind and Quality Standard
Like kind and quality is the replacement cost value standard found in standard ISO HO-3 and commercial property policy forms: “we will pay the cost to repair or replace… with material of like kind and quality.” LKQ requires materials of similar type, quality, and performance characteristics — not necessarily identical materials, and not inferior materials. Where an exact match is possible at a reasonable cost, the LKQ standard is satisfied by the matching material. Where an exact match is impossible due to discontinuation or unavailability, the LKQ standard requires the carrier to provide materials that achieve an equivalent quality level and, where visible, an equivalent appearance.
LKQ is not the same as “functional equivalent.” A functional equivalent might serve the same purpose at a lower quality level — a 25-year standard shingle instead of a 50-year architectural shingle, or commercial-grade LVP instead of solid oak hardwood. These substitutions satisfy the functional test but fail the quality test. The quality dimension of LKQ means the replacement material must be in the same quality tier as the original: if the original was premium quality, the replacement must be premium quality. The insurance carrier’s obligation is not to restore the property to an acceptable quality level — it is to restore it to the quality level it was at before the loss.
Common LKQ Disputes by Material Category
Hardwood Flooring
Solid hardwood flooring LKQ disputes arise most frequently when: partial replacement of a continuous floor run is impossible to match because the original product is discontinued; the original floor was site-finished (sanded and stained in place) and the replacement must also be site-finished to match the existing stain color; or the original wood species has significant color variation that cannot be replicated with a new product. Documentation for hardwood matching claims: identify the original species, grade, and width (3.25″ select red oak is different from 2.25″ #1 common red oak — they do not match); consult the original flooring supplier or a National Wood Flooring Association (NWFA) certified inspector; get written confirmation of discontinuation from the manufacturer if the product is no longer available.
Site-finishing dimension: a carrier who approves replacement hardwood flooring but specifies prefinished material rather than site-finished is not approving LKQ when the existing floor is site-finished. Prefinished and site-finished hardwood have different surface profiles, different sheen levels, and visibly different appearances at the seam between old and new material. A mix of site-finished existing and prefinished replacement on a visible continuous floor run does not meet the LKQ standard.
Roofing Materials
Roofing LKQ disputes fall into two categories: product substitution (carrier specifies a lower-quality shingle than the original) and matching (carrier approves only the damaged slopes, leaving undamaged slopes that cannot be matched). For product substitution: the original shingle’s Class A fire rating, Class 4 impact resistance (if applicable), wind rating, and dimensional profile must be replicated in the replacement. A 30-year 3-tab shingle is not LKQ for a 50-year architectural shingle with Class 4 impact rating regardless of the price similarity. Document the original shingle’s specifications with the manufacturer’s product sheet — this is the LKQ baseline.
For roofing matching: the critical question is whether undamaged slopes can be matched with new shingles of the same product. Asphalt shingles fade and age over time — a 10-year-old shingle cannot be matched by new shingles of the same product because the new shingles are a different color. When partial replacement produces a visible color mismatch, the matching doctrine applies. States with the strongest matching case law for roofing: Minnesota (Mork v. Homesales Inc., 2013, establishing matching obligation); Colorado (prior to 2023 legislation restricting matching for cosmetic damage); Wisconsin; and Illinois. Colorado’s 2023 Senate Bill 178 limited matching claims for cosmetic hail damage — functional damage still supports matching claims in Colorado.
Siding
Vinyl siding matching disputes are among the most common in the post-storm claim market. Vinyl siding fades, and colors are frequently discontinued. A partial siding replacement on a single elevation that matches when installed but diverges in color after 2 to 3 years of UV exposure does not satisfy the LKQ standard. The standard matching claim for siding: document the existing product and color; verify with the manufacturer and distributors that the product is discontinued or unavailable; demonstrate with photographs or color samples that available products do not match the existing color. The strongest documentation is a side-by-side photograph of the existing siding and the closest available matching product showing the color difference.
Fiber cement siding (HardiePlank and equivalents) matching: Hardie product lines change periodically, and older profiles (HardiePlank 4.5″ exposure traditional lap, for instance) may have been replaced by different profile options. When the original profile is discontinued, the carrier owes replacement with the closest available profile — and if no profile achieves a reasonable match, a full-elevation or full-building replacement may be warranted under the matching doctrine.
Cabinetry
Cabinet LKQ disputes arise when: partial replacement is required (one section of a kitchen run was damaged while the balance was unaffected) and the existing cabinet line is discontinued; the existing cabinet construction is solid wood (face frame + solid wood doors) and the carrier specifies particleboard-box construction; or the existing cabinet finish is a custom color or custom stain that cannot be replicated by standard cabinet lines. Cabinet matching documentation: the original cabinet manufacturer and product line (check the interior of the cabinet door or the drawer box for a manufacturer label); consult a local kitchen and bath dealer for availability; get written confirmation if the product line is discontinued.
Tile and Stone
Natural stone (marble, travertine, slate) is inherently variable — no two slabs are identical, and older installations may use stone that is no longer quarried or that has aged to a different surface appearance. Tile (ceramic, porcelain) is subject to discontinuation just as flooring and siding are. For tile matching: the pattern, size, color, and surface texture of the existing tile are all matching parameters. A 12×12 glazed ceramic tile in a specific color that has been discontinued cannot be matched with a 12×24 large-format tile in a similar color — the format difference alone creates a visible mismatch in any new section of installation adjacent to the existing tile. Document the original tile with photographs, attempt manufacturer identification (often embossed on the back face of the tile), and get written dealer confirmation of discontinuation.
Documenting Matching Claims in the Xactimate Estimate
Matching claims are supplement items — they are generally not in the original carrier estimate because the adjuster assumes available matching materials at the time of the initial estimate. When matching documentation confirms the original material is discontinued or unavailable, the supplement is built around three elements: the LKQ baseline (documentation of what the original material was and its quality tier); the discontinuation documentation (manufacturer and distributor written confirmation); and the expanded scope calculation (cost to replace the full floor, elevation, or roof surface rather than only the damaged section).
The Xactimate F9 note on the expanded replacement line item documents: the original material specification, the confirmation of discontinuation (with vendor names and dates of confirmation), the visible match area that requires replacement to achieve a uniform appearance, and the cost differential between the partial repair and the full-replacement scope. This note is the adjuster’s guide to approving the supplement — without it, the expanded replacement is a facially excessive scope request with no documented justification.
Anti-Match Legislation and Trends
The property insurance industry has actively lobbied for legislation limiting matching obligations, particularly in high-CAT states where roofing matching claims became a significant driver of insurer losses after major hail events. Colorado SB 23-178 (2023) limits matching claims for cosmetic hail damage — damage that is aesthetic but does not impair the functional performance of the material. The legislation does not eliminate matching for functional damage. Texas has not enacted similar legislation as of early 2026. Florida’s post-reform environment makes matching claims harder to litigate but does not eliminate the LKQ standard for material selection in reconstruction.
The trend across multiple states is toward narrowing matching obligations for cosmetic damage while preserving them for functional damage. Understanding whether the damage at issue is functional (impairs performance — wind-driven water infiltration through a compromised shingle; hail impact that cracks a shingle tab) versus cosmetic (aesthetic only — dented metal gutters, granule loss that does not expose mat) is the threshold question that determines whether the matching doctrine applies. Restoration contractors and public adjusters who can document functional damage — not just cosmetic impact — are best positioned to support matching claims in jurisdictions with or without anti-match legislation.
Internal Links
- Reconstruction: Complete Professional Guide
- Post-Disaster Reconstruction: Scope, Permitting, and Sequencing
- Reconstruction Project Management: Subcontractors, Inspections, and CO
- Xactimate and Scope Development: How Carriers Price Claims
- Disputed Claims and the Appraisal Process
- Wind and Hail Damage: Scope, Insurance Claims, and Repair Standards
Frequently Asked Questions
What does ‘like kind and quality’ mean in a reconstruction insurance claim?
Like kind and quality (LKQ) requires the insured property to be restored with materials of similar type, quality, and performance characteristics to those that existed before the loss. It does not mean identical materials — it means reasonably equivalent in durability, appearance, and function. Where the original material cannot be matched because it has been discontinued, the carrier’s obligation expands to achieve a visually uniform result that meets the original quality level.
When is an insurance carrier required to replace an entire floor instead of patching the damaged section?
A carrier is required to cover full floor replacement when the damaged material is discontinued, unavailable in the existing color and pattern, or when a patch would produce a noticeable mismatch in color, sheen, texture, or pattern visible in normal use. The matching doctrine holds that the RCV standard requires restoration to a uniform appearance, not merely functional repair. A floor that looks noticeably patched has not been restored to pre-loss condition.
What is the matching doctrine for roofing in hail damage claims?
The roofing matching doctrine applies when hail damages only a portion of a roof and undamaged slopes cannot be matched with new shingles because the existing product is discontinued, aged to a different color, or otherwise unavailable. In these circumstances the carrier may owe replacement of all slopes to achieve a uniform appearance. Colorado enacted anti-match legislation in 2023 limiting matching for cosmetic damage; functional damage still supports matching claims. Courts in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Illinois have upheld roofing matching obligations.
How do I document that a discontinued material cannot be matched?
Discontinuation documentation requires: a written statement from the original manufacturer confirming the product is discontinued; written confirmation from at least two local distributors that the material is unavailable; photographs of the existing material showing the specific color and pattern; and a professional assessment confirming no available product is a reasonable match. This documentation package is the supplement support for a full-replacement matching claim.
Does a carrier have to use the same brand of materials in reconstruction?
No. The like kind and quality standard does not require the same brand — it requires materials of equivalent quality, durability, and appearance. A carrier can specify a different brand of shingle with the same class, wind rating, and dimensional profile. Where the brand difference produces a different appearance, that difference becomes a matching issue. The homeowner’s right is to materials that restore the property to its pre-loss quality level and appearance.