Cargo Theft & Loss Recovery Calculator

Estimate cargo claim recovery after deductibles, depreciation, and carrier liability caps

Ad placeholder (leaderboard)

When cargo is stolen or lost, the amount you actually recover is rarely the full value of the goods. Carrier liability is often capped per pound, depreciation lowers the recoverable value, and an insurance deductible comes off the top. This calculator estimates the net recovery under each basis of liability and shows the uncovered shortfall.

How it works

The recovery is the lesser of the depreciated value and the carrier’s liability cap, minus the deductible:

depreciated_value = actual_value × (1 − depreciation%)
carrier_cap       = declared_value            (full value basis)
                  = weight × per_lb_rate       (released / Carmack limit)
gross_recovery    = min(depreciated_value, carrier_cap)
net_recovery      = max(0, gross_recovery − deductible)
shortfall         = actual_value − net_recovery

The basis of liability is the key driver. A released value rate of a few cents per pound can cap recovery far below the cargo’s worth, while declaring full value removes the per-pound ceiling.

Example

2,000 lb of cargo worth $40,000 shipped under a 60-cents-per-pound released value rate is capped at $1,200 from the carrier, regardless of value. Even before depreciation or a deductible, that leaves a $38,800 shortfall — which is exactly why shippers buy separate cargo insurance for high-value loads.

Notes

Carmack recovery defaults to the actual loss unless the carrier lawfully limited liability and the shipper agreed. Depreciation and valuation rules differ by commodity and policy wording. Treat the figure as an estimate for negotiation, not a coverage determination. All math runs locally.

Ad placeholder (rectangle)