Skip to main content
GuidesBefore you file

How to document damage before you file a claim

The evidence you capture in the first hours does more for your claim than anything you say later. A practical, step-by-step checklist for getting it right.

6 min read
By the Koala team
Last reviewed June 10, 2026

The single biggest thing you can do for a claim happens before you file it: capture the evidence while the damage is fresh. Adjusters weren't there when it happened. Your documentation is how they see it. Days later, after cleanup and temporary repairs, that proof is gone. Here's how to get it right, in order.

Before you touch anything

  1. 1

    Confirm it's safe

    Check for structural damage, gas, and electrical hazards. Shut off utilities if you need to and it's safe to do so. Get people and pets out of harm's way first.

  2. 2

    Stop the damage from getting worse

    Most policies require you to take reasonable steps to prevent further loss: tarp a roof, shut off the water, board a broken window. This is your "duty to mitigate." Keep every receipt; these costs are often reimbursable.

  3. 3

    Don't throw anything away yet

    Damaged belongings are evidence. Set them aside rather than hauling them to the curb. An adjuster may want to see them, and photos of an empty room prove nothing.

Build your evidence

  1. 1

    Photograph and film everything

    Wide shots to establish the room, then close-ups of each damaged item and area. Capture serial numbers and labels. Video narrated as you walk through is fast and hard to argue with. More is better. You can't go back.

  2. 2

    Make an itemized inventory

    List each damaged item with its age, brand and model, and a rough replacement value. Attach receipts, manuals, or order confirmations where you have them. A spreadsheet or a notes app is plenty.

  3. 3

    Get independent repair estimates

    Where you can, get a written estimate from a licensed contractor or shop. It gives you an independent number to compare against the insurer's. The two rarely match.

  4. 4

    Keep every receipt

    Temporary repairs and, if your home is unlivable, hotel, meals, and other extra costs may be covered under Additional Living Expenses (ALE). You can only claim what you can document.

Set up your paper trail

  1. 1

    Notify your insurer promptly

    Report the loss and get a claim number. Prompt notice is a policy condition. The sooner you file, the fewer arguments about timing later.

  2. 2

    Start a claim journal

    Log every call and email: the date, who you spoke to, and what was said or promised. When a claim drags on, this record is often what breaks the tie.

None of this requires special tools: a phone camera, a notes app, and a folder for receipts cover most of it. The households that get paid fairly are almost always the ones that documented early and kept a clean record. Do that first, and everything after it gets easier.

General information

This article is general information, not legal or professional advice. Insurance rules vary by state and by policy, so your own policy language and your state's regulations control. Koala is not a law firm. For advice on your specific situation, consult your policy, your state's Department of Insurance, or a licensed professional.
The Koala advisor

Have a question about any of this?

Ask the advisor. It's an AI that teaches you how insurance actually works in plain English: what a coverage does, what a word on your policy means, and what happens next. Nobody is trying to sell you a policy at the end of it.

Every account gets 10 questions a month, free. They come back on the 1st.

KoalaKoala advisorAsk anything
  • What does an umbrella policy actually cover?
  • How does a deductible work on a homeowners claim?
  • What is an adjuster allowed to ask me for?
Ask your own

Reading up because a claim isn't going your way?

Upload your documents and Koala reads them, finds what you're owed, and drafts the demand. You approve everything before it's sent.

Free mode: no payments, nothing is charged