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insurance unoccupied home building materials
MarcoM
Posts: 809 Forumite
Hello,
I have unoccupied insurance for the house I am currently having refurbuished. The policy does not cover unfixed building materials and I will soon be getting delivery of a kitchen and bathroom which will be unfixed for a while whilst the work goes on.
The insurer says they cannot insure these materials until they are fixed. This sounds like the usual insurance rip off.
Has anyone been in the same position? Is there any standalone policy I can buy anywhere else?
I don't really want to have a kitchen worth 8k uninsured.
Regards,
I have unoccupied insurance for the house I am currently having refurbuished. The policy does not cover unfixed building materials and I will soon be getting delivery of a kitchen and bathroom which will be unfixed for a while whilst the work goes on.
The insurer says they cannot insure these materials until they are fixed. This sounds like the usual insurance rip off.
Has anyone been in the same position? Is there any standalone policy I can buy anywhere else?
I don't really want to have a kitchen worth 8k uninsured.
Regards,
0
Comments
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It's hardly a rip-off, easy scam for a person and a builder to pull, goods delivered, get "stolen", builder uses the "stolen" goods at his next job and charges next customer for goods he got for nothing and first home owner claims the goods back on insurance, builder bungs first guy £500 for his trouble
Sam Vimes' Boots Theory of Socioeconomic Unfairness:
People are rich because they spend less money. A poor man buys $10 boots that last a season or two before he's walking in wet shoes and has to buy another pair. A rich man buys $50 boots that are made better and give him 10 years of dry feet. The poor man has spent $100 over those 10 years and still has wet feet.
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How's it a rip-off? They are telling you it's not insured, hardly trying to rip you off there are they?0
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Your builder should have all risks cover
Ask them to confirm they have all risks to include unfixed materials - ask for a copy of the cert/policy if you are worried0 -
Ask them!!
Presumably the builder doesn't manufacture any materials, but all are bought in0 -
Is it specifically excluded? If not, why can it not be considered contents? That's the way I'd deal with with it, provided there isn't a specific exclusion for yet-to-be-installed materials.0
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Chickenlips wrote: »Is it specifically excluded? If not, why can it not be considered contents? That's the way I'd deal with with it, provided there isn't a specific exclusion for yet-to-be-installed materials.
Perhaps because the house is unoccupied - there is no contents cover?0 -
Hello,
I have unoccupied insurance for the house I am currently having refurbuished. The policy does not cover unfixed building materials and I will soon be getting delivery of a kitchen and bathroom which will be unfixed for a while whilst the work goes on.
The insurer says they cannot insure these materials until they are fixed. This sounds like the usual insurance rip off.
Has anyone been in the same position? Is there any standalone policy I can buy anywhere else?
I don't really want to have a kitchen worth 8k uninsured.
Regards,
People like you, who quote 'rip off' without any justification, need education regarding how insurance works. Insurance policies do not cover everything. Some policies are wider than others. What is important is that the relevant exclusions are communicated to you in order that you can take the appropriate action.
As Quentin says below, you can request that your builder has Contract Works cover, however, what needs to be added is that it would also be necessary for your builder to be responsible for the works up until handover to you, as the homeowner. Without the builder being responsible for the works, it wont matter whether he has Contract Works insurance or not. He needs insurable (financial) interest.
Also, it does not necessarily matter whether the builder has provided the kitchen/bathroom materials or not. A Contract Works policy can cover 'free issue materials'. But the key is that the builder must have accepted responsibility for this up until handover to the homeowner, you.
It is unlikely that a Contents policy will cover will cover unfixed buildings materials, and you may find that your policy has a specific exclusion for this (common for unoccupied buildings policies)
Finally, you can purchase your own Contract Works policy, but this does not tend to happen for smaller projects.
Hope this helps.
DM0
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