Protection

Buildings, contents,
or both.

Most home insurance is bought on price comparison sites by people choosing the cheapest option. That's fine — until you need to claim and discover the policy doesn't cover what you assumed.

The two types of cover.

  • Buildings insurance

    Covers the structure of your home — walls, roof, fitted kitchens, bathrooms, permanent fixtures. If the house burns down or floods, this pays to rebuild it. Your mortgage lender will require it as a condition of lending.

  • Contents insurance

    Covers your belongings — furniture, clothes, electronics, appliances. Technically optional, but most homes contain £20,000–30,000 worth of things that would be difficult to replace all at once.

The underinsurance trap

Most people vastly underestimate what they own. Walk room to room and add it up: sofa £1,500, TV £500, two laptops £1,200, kitchen gadgets £800, clothes £2,000, jewellery £1,000. The total gets large very quickly.

If you insure for £15,000 but actually own £30,000 worth of belongings, insurers apply "average" — they only pay half of any claim, regardless of what was stolen or damaged. We help you get the sum insured right from the start.

What affects your premium.

  • Security

    Proper locks, alarms, smoke detectors. Better security means lower premiums — and some insurers require certain standards to insure you at all.

  • Location

    Same house, different postcode, sometimes wildly different premium. Can't change it, but it's worth understanding how it factors in.

  • Property type and age

    Modern standard construction is cheapest. Listed buildings, period properties, or non-standard construction (timber frame, thatched roof) cost significantly more — and some insurers won't touch them.

  • Claims history

    Previous claims push premiums up. Three or more claim-free years typically earns a no-claims discount worth having.

Small print that catches people out.

Flooding: Standard policies often have limited flood cover, particularly in higher-risk areas. If you're in a flood zone, check this specifically — not all policies are equal.

Accidental damage: Usually an add-on, not standard. If you want cover for a cracked screen or a knocked-over TV, make sure it's explicitly included.

Single-item limits: Most contents policies cap payouts on individual items at £1,500–2,000. Got a £5,000 watch or a valuable piece of jewellery? It needs to be listed separately.

Get a home insurance quote

As with all insurance policies, conditions and exclusions will apply.

Cover that does what it says.

Book a free chat and let's make sure your home is properly insured — with cover you can actually rely on.