A cheap home insurance policy feels like a saving until a claim reveals what it does not cover. Underinsured rebuild values, unscheduled high-value items, gaps in accidental damage cover, and providers with poor claims records all create the same problem: a policy that fails at the moment it matters most. The difference between adequate cover and inadequate cover is rarely visible until a claim arises, and by that point the gap is irreversible.
Home and contents insurance protects the property you own and the possessions within it against damage, loss, and liability. Buildings insurance is a mandatory condition of every residential mortgage; your lender requires it as part of the mortgage agreement. But the obligation to hold cover does not mean the cheapest policy available is adequate. The gaps in poorly written policies only become visible when a claim is made, which is precisely the wrong moment to discover them. At Vsure Financial, we help you find home and contents insurance with the right level of cover, at a competitive premium, from a provider with a strong claims-paying record. We identify policies without the gaps that matter, ensuring rebuild values are correctly calculated, high-value items are properly listed, and the cover responds in the circumstances you would actually encounter.
Your complete guide to Home & Contents Insurance
Buildings insurance: insuring for the right amount
Buildings insurance covers the structure of your property, including walls, roof, floors, fitted kitchens, bathroom suites, and permanent fixtures, against damage caused by fire, flood, subsidence, storm, escape of water, and other covered events. The most common and most costly mistake is insuring for the wrong amount. The buildings sum insured should reflect the rebuild cost of the property, which is the cost to demolish the existing structure and rebuild it from scratch to the same specification, not its market value and not what you paid for it. For most properties, the rebuild cost is substantially lower than the market value. For some properties, particularly period homes, listed buildings, or those with unusual construction, it can be higher. Underinsuring your property creates a condition called average, under which your insurer can proportionally reduce the amount they pay on any claim. A £500,000 property insured for £300,000 when the rebuild cost is £400,000 is a significant and entirely avoidable underinsurance risk.
Contents insurance: what is actually covered and what is not
Contents insurance covers your personal possessions within the home, including furniture, electronics, clothing, kitchen appliances, and valuables, against damage, theft, or loss. The scope of cover and the conditions attached to it vary considerably between providers. Key areas to examine include: accidental damage cover (not included in all standard policies; it often requires an additional premium); away from home cover, which extends protection to items such as laptops, jewellery, and phones taken outside the property; single item limits (most policies apply a maximum payout per individual item, typically £1,500 to £2,500, above which items must be specifically listed and valued); and exclusions for unoccupied properties. High-value items such as watches, jewellery, specialist cameras, musical instruments, and art frequently need to be scheduled separately on the policy with their own specified values to be fully covered. Your adviser will review your possessions and ensure nothing of significance falls through the gaps.
Combined policies, landlord cover, and specialist requirements
Most insurers offer combined buildings and contents policies, which simplify administration and often carry a modest saving over purchasing cover separately. This is the most practical option for most owner-occupiers. However, certain property types require specialist consideration. Listed buildings require cover that reflects the obligation to restore using period-appropriate materials and methods; standard policies rarely accommodate this adequately. Non-standard construction, such as thatched roofs, timber frame, cob walls, or steel-framed properties, requires specialist underwriting because the rebuild risk differs significantly from brick and tile. High-value properties with significant art, jewellery, antiques, or other valuables often require access to specialist high-net-worth insurers who provide agreed values and broader cover conditions than standard market products. Landlords renting their property to tenants must hold a landlord buildings policy rather than a standard residential policy, as standard policies are specifically voided when a property is tenanted.
Claims performance: why the provider matters as much as the premium
When comparing home insurance, the premium is the most visible variable, but it is not the most important one. What matters most is whether the policy pays out in the circumstances you would actually face, and whether the claims process is handled efficiently. A significant minority of insurance claims are declined or partially reduced, often because the policy wording excluded a scenario the policyholder assumed was covered, or because the claim was not notified or managed in the way the insurer required. Checking the Financial Ombudsman Service's published complaint data and independent policy comparison reviews gives a clearer picture of how different providers actually perform when claims arise. At Vsure Financial, we guide you towards providers with strong claims records and clear policy wording, not just the cheapest premium on a comparison site. Cover that fails when you need it is not a bargain at any price.