Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
Buildings Insurance - Rip Off?
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How much should my buildings insurance be? I have 2 lower floors and my neighbour has the top 2 floors of an 1870 terrace. The property’s rooms are big and it has a massive chimney. We share the cost of buildings insurance which is now £82 pcm between us. Is this a lot?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.From the (Government-funded) Money Advice Service, published last year:
"Buildings insurance covers the property itself as well as the permanent fixtures and fittings, such as the kitchen and bathrooms and on average costs £111.83 a year, according to the AA"
Source:
https:/ /www.mo neyadvi ceservi ce.org. uk/blog /how-mu ch-is-t he-aver age-cos t-of-ho me-and- content s-insur ance
"Buildings insurance covers the property itself as well as the permanent fixtures and fittings, such as the kitchen and bathrooms and on average costs £111.83 a year, according to the AA"
Source:
https:/
Every year for well over a decade (if I am not mistaken) I have renewed the same two policies for the same two properties with the same insurance outfit. Every year the process starts with them sending me a renewal notice for each policy stating a noticeable increase in premium. Every year I phone them and protest/query the premium. Every year I end up with a very modest increase - that is why I am still with them. It seems to me that the "system" (for which read "the computer/software") is rigged to try it on and when you challenge them the premium is adjusted down. Being rather cynical toward insurance companies, I would not be surprised if this was standard practice.
Something else that is standard practice and foreigners I know find really strange, is to base the premium mostly on the number of bedrooms. This way you could easily pay more for insuring a 70m² dwelling with four (mostly very small) bedrooms than a 110m² one with two or three (good ones). Elsewhere it is the norm to base the premium on the total floor area (trust the foreigners to be illogical).
Something else that is standard practice and foreigners I know find really strange, is to base the premium mostly on the number of bedrooms. This way you could easily pay more for insuring a 70m² dwelling with four (mostly very small) bedrooms than a 110m² one with two or three (good ones). Elsewhere it is the norm to base the premium on the total floor area (trust the foreigners to be illogical).