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Landlord Insurance vs Homeowners Insurance UK 2026

Landlord insurance vs homeowners insurance in the UK: what each covers, why letting changes your cover, and who needs which. No quotes, routing or commission.

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Chandraketu Tripathi
Finance Editor, Kaeltripton
Published 4 Jun 2026
Last reviewed 4 Jun 2026
✓ Fact-checked
Landlord Insurance vs Homeowners Insurance UK 2026

Photo by Viktor Forgacs on Unsplash

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LANDLORD PROPERTY: HEAD TO HEAD

UK property owners often ask whether their existing home insurance covers a property they let out. It usually does not. Homeowners insurance is built for owner-occupiers, while landlord insurance is built for let property and adds loss of rent and property owners' liability. This guide explains the difference rather than picking a winner, using Association of British Insurers and Money Helper sources. Kael Tripton does not provide quotes, does not route enquiries to brokers, and does not earn commission from any provider mentioned.

Key Facts

  • Homeowners insurance covers the building structure and the owner's contents for an owner-occupied home (ABI, accessed June 2026).
  • Landlord insurance usually covers buildings and contents plus loss of rent, alternative accommodation, and property owners' liability (Money Helper; ABI, accessed June 2026).
  • You must tell your insurer if a property is to be let, sub-let, or used for business, as this changes the risk and the cover (ABI, accessed June 2026).
  • A standard home policy may not respond to a claim on a let property if the insurer was not told it was rented out (ABI, accessed June 2026).
  • Both covers are sold by FCA-authorised insurers, and disputes can be referred to the Financial Ombudsman Service (FCA; FOS, accessed June 2026).

At a glance: landlord vs homeowners insurance

Attribute Landlord insurance Homeowners insurance
Who it is forOwners letting a propertyOwner-occupiers
Buildings coverYesYes
Contents coverLandlord's contents onlyOwner's own contents
Loss of rentUsually included or optionalNot applicable
LiabilityProperty owners' liabilityPersonal liability as occupier
Tenant's belongingsNot coveredNot applicable
Letting disclosureBuilt for lettingMust tell insurer if let

What landlord insurance is

Landlord insurance is designed for property let to tenants. It typically covers the building and any contents the landlord provides, such as furnishings in a furnished let, and adds protections specific to renting. Money Helper notes that landlord insurance usually provides loss of rent, the cost of alternative accommodation for tenants after an insured event, cover for locks and keys, and property owners' liability.

Property owners' liability is central. It covers the landlord against claims by tenants, visitors, or the public for injury or damage connected to the property, for example a defect that injures a tenant. Landlord policies can also offer options such as accidental or malicious damage by tenants, rent guarantee, and legal expenses, depending on the insurer.

What homeowners insurance is

Homeowners insurance, or standard home insurance, is built for people living in their own home. The ABI describes buildings insurance as covering the structure and permanent fixtures, and contents insurance as covering the owner's possessions. It also usually includes personal liability cover for the owner as occupier, for instance if a visitor is injured and the owner is legally liable.

Crucially, this cover assumes the policyholder lives in the property. It is not designed for tenanted property, and the risks of letting, such as longer void periods, tenant damage, and rental income loss, sit outside it.

How the cover differs

The decisive difference is occupancy. Homeowners insurance assumes the owner lives there; landlord insurance assumes tenants do. This changes the contents position, because a landlord policy covers only the landlord's own contents, not the tenant's belongings, which the tenant should insure themselves. It changes the liability position, replacing personal occupier liability with property owners' liability. And it adds rental-specific protections such as loss of rent that a home policy does not contain.

The most important practical point is disclosure. If you let a property insured under a standard home policy without telling the insurer, the policy may not respond to a claim, because the risk it was priced for has changed. The ABI and insurer conditions are clear that you must tell the insurer if a property is to be let, sub-let, or used for business. Switching to landlord insurance, or adding the correct endorsement, keeps cover valid.

How the cost differs

Premiums depend on the property, location, rebuild cost, tenant type, and the options chosen, so there is no single price. Landlord insurance can cost more than a comparable home policy because letting carries additional risks and the cover is broader, but the figures vary widely. Check provider policy schedules and FCA-authorised brokers for live quotes rather than relying on a single figure.

Who landlord insurance suits

Anyone who lets a property, from an accidental landlord renting out a former home to a portfolio investor. It also suits owners letting to specific tenant types, such as students or housing benefit tenants, where tailored cover is available.

Who homeowners insurance suits

Owner-occupiers living in their own home. If their circumstances change and they begin letting all or part of the property, they should move to landlord insurance or arrange the appropriate cover and disclosure.

When you need both

A single owner-occupied home needs homeowners insurance, and a single let property needs landlord insurance, so most people need one or the other for a given property. An owner who lives in one home and lets another needs both, one policy for each property, each matched to how the property is occupied.

Frequently asked questions

Will my home insurance cover a property I rent out?

Usually not. Standard home insurance is for owner-occupiers, and you must tell your insurer if you let the property. If you do not, a claim on the let property may not be paid. Landlord insurance is the appropriate cover.

What does landlord insurance add over home insurance?

It typically adds loss of rent, alternative accommodation for tenants, property owners' liability, and options such as tenant damage and rent guarantee, reflecting the risks of letting that a home policy does not cover.

Does landlord insurance cover my tenant's belongings?

No. Landlord insurance covers the building and the landlord's own contents, not the tenant's possessions. Tenants should take out their own tenants contents insurance.

Do I have to tell my insurer if I let my home?

Yes. You must tell your insurer if the property is to be let, sub-let, or used for business. Failing to disclose this can invalidate cover, because it changes the risk the insurer agreed to cover.

Is landlord insurance a legal requirement?

It is not generally required by law, but a mortgage lender will usually require buildings cover, and letting without telling your insurer can leave you uninsured. Landlord insurance is strongly advisable for let property.

How do I check an insurer is authorised?

Search the firm's name or reference number on the FCA Register at register.fca.org.uk. Both covers are sold by FCA-authorised insurers, and eligible disputes can be referred to the Financial Ombudsman Service.

Disclaimer: Kael Tripton Ltd is an independent UK editorial publisher, registered with the ICO (ZC135439). Kael Tripton is not authorised or regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. This article is editorial information only and is not financial advice, insurance advice, or a recommendation to buy any product. Kael Tripton does not provide quotes, does not route enquiries to brokers, and does not earn commission from any provider mentioned. Always check the FCA Register and read the policy documentation before buying any insurance product. Featured Partner placements are clearly disclosed and do not influence editorial selection or ranking.
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Editorial Disclaimer

The content on Kaeltripton.com is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, tax, legal or regulatory advice. Kaeltripton.com is not authorised or regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and is not a financial adviser, mortgage broker, insurance intermediary or investment firm. Nothing on this site should be construed as a personal recommendation. Rates, figures and product details are indicative only, subject to change without notice, and should always be verified directly with the relevant provider, HMRC, the FCA register, the Bank of England, Ofgem or other appropriate authority before any financial decision is made. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. If you require regulated financial advice, please consult a qualified adviser authorised by the FCA.

CT
Chandraketu Tripathi
Finance Editor · Kaeltripton.com
Chandraketu (CK) Tripathi, founder and lead editor of Kael Tripton. 22 years in finance and marketing across 23 markets. Writes on UK personal finance, tax, mortgages, insurance, energy, and investing. Sources: HMRC, FCA, Ofgem, BoE, ONS.

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