Understanding
insurance claims
If you have reason to make a claim, you should
notify the insurance company as soon as possible. There will
usually be a clause in the policy document which requires
you to do this as soon as is practically possible. If you
have been burgled, obviously you will need to notify the
police ahead of your insurance company.
For any major claim
(different companies have their own internal guidelines
but it tends to be around the £1000 mark),
the insurance company will send a loss adjuster round to
assess whether you are in compliance with the terms of your
policy.
They will check that all the details you providenot done
anything that puts you in breach of the terms of your policy.
This applies
d when you took out the policy are accurate and make sure
that you have to both buildings and contents insurance.
One
of the reasons that the insurance industry has had bad
press over the years is because of grievances over occasions
when they have not paid out. Many people live, apparently
safe in the knowledge that their home is insured against
all manner
of catastrophe, only to find that they are left with next
to nothing when disaster strikes.
There are two lesson to
be learned from this:
- Never tell insurance companies something
that is inaccurate or untrue.
- Always read the small
print.
Contained within the detailed
policy document is an array of exclusions - special circumstances
or events where
you insurance cover will not be of use to you.
Some of the more common ones are listed below, but you should always
check the individual policy details:
- Failure to provide
accurate information. Aside from anything else, you
run the risk of being prosecuted
for fraud if
it is found that you deliberately
falsified your claim details.
- Failure to install or correctly
use the door and window locks, burglar alarm, or other
security system.
- Any repair work that is caused by lack
of maintenance or negligence will almost certainly not
be covered. If
you let your home go to
rack and ruin
- never service
the plumbing and boiler, forget to ever clean out the gutters,
or neglect to replace roof tiles lost in a storm -
then the insurance
company
is unlikely to foot the bill for any major work that arises
as a result of your lack
of
action.
- If your home suffers further damage as a
result of you failing to carry out proper repair work on
the original
problem,
then
you will
find it
difficult to convince the insurance company of their obligation
to pay for the work.
- Buildings insurance does not usually
cover damage to fences, walls, gates, or hedges for damage
caused by storms
or inclement
weather.
You may possibly
be able to claim if someone comes and steals all your
fences, but you almost never be covered if they are blown
away
in a hurricane.
- Similarly, your garden furniture may be
covered if it is stored in a shed that is secured with
an approved
lock,
but
you are unlikely
to get
a payout
if it
is left on the patio.
- Finally, bear in mind that sometimes
it is not worth replacing possessions or doing repair
work using the
insurance. If
it will cost less than
or not too much higher than the excess then the loss
of no-claims discounts may
make it
worthwhile paying for some things out of your own
pocket.
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