INSURANCE GUIDE
Listed Building and High Net Worth Home Insurance UK
Specialist cover for listed buildings, period properties, and high-value homes.
TL;DR
- Listed buildings must be insured to their full reinstatement cost using traditional materials - standard calculators underestimate this.
- High net worth home insurance provides higher limits and broader cover for valuable properties and contents.
- Specialist insurers and Lloyd's brokers are needed for listed and high-value properties that standard insurers decline.
- A specialist rebuild cost assessment by a RICS surveyor is essential for listed buildings.
Listed Building Insurance
Listed buildings are protected under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 and any repair or alteration must use traditional materials and methods. This dramatically increases rebuild costs compared to modern construction. A listed building that suffers significant fire or structural damage must be reinstated using lime mortar, hand-made bricks, original timber species, and skilled traditional craftspeople - all at premium costs relative to modern building techniques. Standard home insurance rebuild cost calculators, designed for modern construction, significantly underestimate these costs.
Setting the Right Sum Insured
A specialist rebuild cost assessment from a RICS-qualified buildings surveyor with experience in historic and listed properties is essential. The assessment values the property on a full reinstatement basis - the cost to demolish if necessary and reconstruct to its listed specification, including all approved traditional materials and specialist craft labour. This figure, not the market value, is the appropriate buildings sum insured. Listed building insurance must be arranged for this reinstatement value to avoid underinsurance penalties.
High Net Worth Home Insurance
Standard home insurance is designed for properties valued below approximately £500,000 to £1m. Higher-value properties - large houses, country estates, properties with significant art and antique collections, or unique architectural features - need high net worth (HNW) home insurance. HNW policies provide: higher buildings and contents limits; agreed value settlement for specified items; worldwide contents cover; personal liability limits of £2m-10m; and typically a single excess applied globally rather than per-section. HNW insurers also offer concierge claims handling with specialist loss adjusters.
Contents for High-Value Properties
High net worth properties typically contain significant art, antiques, jewellery, wine collections, and specialist items that standard contents sub-limits cannot adequately cover. HNW contents policies cover these items at their agreed or appraised value rather than market value estimates. Individual items above the per-item limit must be specified and valued. Annual revaluation of high-value collections is advisable to keep the sum insured current.
Disclaimer
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute financial or insurance advice. Kaeltripton.com is not regulated by the FCA. Always read policy documents in full before purchasing cover.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need listed building consent to make an insurance repair?
Emergency repairs to prevent further damage - temporary roof covering, emergency structural shoring - can generally be undertaken without listed building consent. However, permanent repairs using materials or methods that differ from the original must have listed building consent before work begins. Your insurer should be aware of the listed status and can advise on the claims process, which should involve engaging approved conservation architects and contractors.
Is high net worth home insurance much more expensive than standard policies?
HNW home insurance premiums reflect the higher sums insured and the broader cover scope. On a per-£1,000 of insured value basis, HNW cover is often competitive with standard insurance because HNW policyholders tend to have lower claims frequency. The absolute premium will be higher than a standard policy due to the higher values involved. The key value driver is the quality of claims handling and the agreed value settlement approach for high-value items.