INSURANCE GUIDE
Home Contents Insurance UK
What home contents insurance covers, common exclusions to understand, and how to calculate the right sum insured.
TL;DR
- Contents insurance covers your personal belongings against fire, theft, flood, and accidental damage.
- The sum insured should reflect the full replacement cost of all contents - most households underinsure.
- Single-article limits mean high-value individual items need to be specified separately.
- Accidental damage cover for contents is usually an optional add-on, not a standard feature.
What Contents Insurance Covers
Home contents insurance covers moveable personal property within your home against loss or damage from insured events. Standard covers include: fire (damage to all contents from a house fire); theft (items stolen during a break-in); flood and storm (contents damaged by water ingress); and vandalism. The policy covers your own belongings - furniture, clothing, electronics, appliances, and personal effects. It does not cover the building structure (that is buildings insurance) or a lodger's belongings.
Calculating the Right Sum Insured
The sum insured should reflect the cost of replacing all your contents at new prices - not what you paid originally or what they are worth second-hand. A common exercise is the bedroom test: imagine listing everything in each room and what it would cost to replace it new. Most households significantly underestimate this figure. Average UK household contents are estimated to be worth £35,000-55,000; many policies are arranged for much less. Underinsuring can result in proportionate reductions in claim payments under average clauses.
Single-Article Limits and Specified Items
Contents policies apply a single-article limit - a maximum paid for any one item. Typical limits are £1,500-3,000. Jewellery, laptops, cameras, musical instruments, and high-value items that exceed this limit must be specified individually on the policy schedule at their current value. Items not specified will only be paid up to the per-item limit, potentially leaving significant gaps on high-value possessions.
Away from Home Cover
Standard contents insurance typically restricts cover to within the home address. Portable items - laptops, phones, jewellery, cameras - taken outside the home are often not covered by a standard policy. Away from home or personal possessions cover extends the policy to protect items wherever they are within the UK and sometimes worldwide. This extension is essential for frequently carried high-value items.
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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
Does contents insurance cover accidental damage?
Accidental damage to contents - spilling coffee on a laptop, dropping and breaking a television, or sitting on and breaking spectacles - is an optional add-on in most contents policies rather than a standard feature. If you have children or simply want protection against the everyday accidents that damage belongings, accidental damage cover is worth adding. It significantly broadens the scope of a contents policy beyond fire and theft.
Do I need separate contents insurance if I rent?
Yes. If you rent, the landlord's buildings insurance covers the building structure. Your personal belongings are not covered by the landlord's policy. Renters need their own contents insurance for all personal possessions. Some renters policies also include tenants liability cover, which covers accidental damage to the landlord's fixtures and fittings that you are responsible for under the tenancy agreement.