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Renters' contents insurance guide discussion
Former_MSE_Rosie
Posts: 105 Forumite
Renters' insurance guide.
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Comments
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Hi. I'm moving into a new house in 2 weeks, and I'm struggling to find a cheap insurance policy. My new agency wants me to get a policy that covers accidental damage to the property caused by me (aka wine spillage on the carpet). They recommended a company that offers tenant liability insurance, but it's 180£ annually. I've been paying 60£ annually to cover my contents, so tried to look for cheaper alternative. Phoned a few insurers and they all refused to cover accidental damage to the property because the building insurance shall cover it. Anyone has any experience about this?0
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My problem is actually sorted now. Got a smashing 75£ deal from Axa.0
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Do I need "trace and access" cover or "accidental building damage" cover? They aren't on hardly any of my renting contents quotes - first time setting up my own contents insurance so a little lost!Lloyds Mastercard: £0 (0% until December 2018) - I did it yay!
Virgin money: £2000 (0% until June 2019) - regular £150 payments, still in use.0 -
Student_debt_Hype wrote: »Do I need "trace and access" cover or "accidental building damage" cover? They aren't on hardly any of my renting contents quotes - first time setting up my own contents insurance so a little lost!
No, buildings cover will be for the landlord and trace and access for the cost of finding and fixing a leak landlord as well.
Is the landlord/agency saying you have to have these? If they are you may want to post in the renting forum for advice.0 -
Student_debt_Hype wrote: »Do I need "trace and access" cover or "accidental building damage" cover? They aren't on hardly any of my renting contents quotes - first time setting up my own contents insurance so a little lost!
As above, this is buildings cover not contents.
As a renter, the landlord is usually responsible for this.0 -
Why has the quoted article within MSE now disappeared? It was only posted earlier this year, and promised to be quite useful.0
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Hi
I have updated the link to the guide which should now be working.0 -
Actually I have read the article now (thanks for fixing the link), but it missed out an area which I think is quite important - tenants' liability cover. This means you can claim if you accidentally damage your landlord's property. Some contents policies include this, but I am not sure if all do? And when signing a tenancy agreement, often the letting agency will try and push a tenant to take out their recommended contents cover (usually more expensive - they get a kickback) or insist that you have tenants' liability.
We got our own policy (Endsleigh) that covered this. But I am still unsure if most ordinary policies cover it or not? Not much is said about it, so often you have to ring the company to find out, after getting quotes. We found it very useful when our washing machine leaked and spoiled the landlord's kitchen flooring, and we made a successful claim. Landlord and us were both happy!
I assumed the MSE article would touch on this.0 -
I accidentally damaged the bath in my rented flat. The landlord said he would cover it if I paid his excess, but now says his insurers have told him they might go back to me to recover costs. Might being the operative word apparently. I would rather just buy a cheap bath and get it fitted myself, and even the landlord thinks this might be the way to go.
Is this common with landlords insurance? He said he hadn't been told this before.0 -
For info for anybody in a similar situation:
The house I am renting has been subject to subsidence in the past, this has since been rectified.
When I did quotes last year for Contents Only Insurance, I got quotes from Compare the Market & Confused.com.
Compare the Market do not ask any questions on whether the property has been subject to subsidence - quote was around £70.
Confused.com and moneysupermarket DO ask the question - quote was around £150.
In the interest of money saving, I of course went for the cheaper quote. Only to be contacted by the insurer a month later to advise that there would be an additional charge (another £70) as the property has been subject to subsidence and I didn't make them aware (not my fault, compare the market didn't ask!).
I didn't realise that as this was CONTENTS insurance and not buildings insurance that subsidence would make such a difference.
If you are in this situation, beware of lower insurance quotes, and make sure you check the terms thoroughly.
I'm going to contact compare the market separately as I notice when I have done quotes this year that they still don't ask the question.0
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