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Contents Insurance Guide UK — Protect Your Belongings

What contents insurance covers, how much it costs, how to value your contents, and how to choose the right policy to protect your possessions.

Insurance information is general guidance only. Insurance products are regulated by the FCA. Policy terms vary between providers — always read the policy document before purchasing.

Contents insurance protects everything inside your home — from electronics and furniture to clothing and personal items. Whether you own or rent, your belongings are not covered by buildings insurance or your landlord’s policy.

What Is Covered

Category Examples
Furniture Sofas, beds, tables, chairs, wardrobes
Electronics TV, laptop, phone, gaming console, tablet
Kitchen appliances Fridge, washing machine, microwave
Clothing All clothing and shoes
Jewellery and watches Often with a single-item limit
Soft furnishings Curtains, rugs, bedding, towels
Personal items Books, toys, games, decorations
Bicycles Usually up to a specified limit
Garden contents Garden furniture, tools, plants (limited)

Types of Cover

Cover Type Protection Level
New for old Pays replacement cost of new equivalent item (recommended)
Indemnity Pays current value (accounting for wear and tear — lower payout)
Bedroom rated Premium based on number of bedrooms (simpler)
Sum insured You specify total value of contents

Always choose “new for old” cover where possible — indemnity policies pay significantly less.

Typical Costs

Property Annual Premium (Standard Cover)
1-bed flat (renter) £60–£150
2-bed house £100–£200
3-bed house £150–£300
4-bed house £200–£400
High-value contents £300–£600+

Factors Affecting Price

Factor Impact
Postcode (crime rate) High impact
Total sum insured Higher value = higher premium
Security (locks, alarms) Better security = lower premium
Claims history Previous claims increase costs
Excess level Higher excess = lower premium
Cover type (accidental damage) Adding AD increases cost

Working Out Your Contents Value

Room-by-Room Checklist

Room Typical Value Range
Living room £3,000–£10,000
Kitchen £2,000–£6,000
Main bedroom £3,000–£8,000
Other bedrooms £1,500–£4,000 each
Bathroom £500–£1,500
Home office £1,000–£5,000
Hallway £500–£2,000
Garden/shed £500–£3,000
Average total £30,000–£50,000

Most people underestimate. Go through each room mentally and add up replacement costs at today’s prices.

Optional Extras

Extra What It Covers Worth It?
Accidental damage Spilling wine on carpet, dropping a TV Yes (if you have children or are clumsy)
Personal possessions away from home Phone, laptop, jewellery when out Yes (if you carry valuables)
Bicycle cover Theft of bicycle away from home Yes (if you have an expensive bike)
Freezer contents Food spoilage from freezer breakdown Minor cost addition
Legal expenses Legal disputes (neighbour, consumer) Useful addition
Home emergency Boiler breakdown, burst pipe, locksmith Alternative: standalone home emergency cover

Single Item Limits

Most policies have a single item limit (typically £1,000–£2,000). Items worth more than this must be individually specified:

Item Type Consider Specifying If Worth Over
Engagement ring £1,000
Watch £1,000
Laptop £1,500
Bicycle £1,000
Camera equipment £1,000
Musical instruments £1,000

Making a Claim

Step Action
1 Report theft to police within 24 hours (get crime reference)
2 Contact insurer as soon as possible
3 List stolen/damaged items with values
4 Provide evidence — photos, receipts, bank statements
5 Get repair/replacement quotes
6 Wait for assessment — insurer may send a loss adjuster
7 Receive payout — replacement, repair, or cash settlement

Tips for Successful Claims

  • Keep receipts and photos of valuable items
  • Take a video walkthrough of your home as evidence
  • Update your insurer when you buy high-value items
  • Report claims promptly

Saving Money

  1. Increase excess — £250–£500 excess significantly reduces premium
  2. Improve security — approved locks, alarm, CCTV
  3. Bundle with buildings — combined home insurance often cheaper
  4. Pay annually — saves 5–10% vs monthly
  5. Accurate valuation — don’t over-insure (but don’t under-insure either)
  6. Shop around at renewal — loyalty rarely pays with insurance

How Much Does Contents Insurance Cost?

Contents insurance premiums vary significantly by postcode, contents value, security, and claims history. Indicative UK market prices for 2025:

Household type Typical annual premium Notes
Single person, flat, £15k contents £70–£130 Low risk postcode
Family home, £45k contents £120–£250 Depends heavily on location
High-value contents £75k+ £250–£600 Specialist insurer often needed
Tenant (personal possessions only) £50–£100 Contents-only policy
Student contents £40–£80 Often included in specialist student policies

Premiums in high-crime postcodes or flood-risk areas can be 50–150% higher than the figures above.

What Is “New for Old” Cover?

Most modern contents insurance is sold as “new for old” — meaning if your 5-year-old laptop is stolen, you receive enough to buy a comparable new laptop today, not the second-hand value. Some budget policies offer indemnity cover instead, which deducts depreciation — check which you have before buying.

New for old is worth having because the difference on a £1,000 item could be £400–£700 after depreciation.

High-Value Items and Specified Cover

Most contents policies include a single article limit — typically £1,500–£2,500. Any single item worth more than this limit must usually be specified (individually listed) on the policy. Items to check:

  • Jewellery and watches
  • Bicycles
  • Musical instruments
  • Art and antiques
  • Cameras and photography equipment
  • Laptops and mobile phones

Items not specified above the single article limit will be paid out at the limit, not their actual value. A £4,000 engagement ring with a £2,000 single article limit means a £2,000 shortfall.

Away-from-Home Cover (Personal Possessions)

Standard contents policies cover items within your home. If you want cover for possessions taken outside — phone, wallet, laptop, bike — you need personal possessions or away-from-home cover. This is often an add-on.

For bicycles specifically, many insurers require individual specification of bikes over £300–£500 and proof of a security lock.

Accidental Damage vs Defined Perils

Most contents policies are defined perils — they cover named events (fire, theft, flood, escape of water) but not accidental damage unless you add it. Accidental damage cover is worth adding if you have children, clumsy housemates, or valuables. Common accidental damage claims:

  • Red wine on cream carpet
  • Knocked-over TV
  • Child drawing on sofa
  • Dropped and cracked tablet screen

Contents Insurance for Tenants: What You Do (and Don’t) Need

As a tenant, you are only responsible for insuring your contents — not the building, fixtures, or fittings, which are the landlord’s responsibility. Don’t pay for buildings cover in a tenants’ contents policy.

However, check whether your policy includes liability to landlord cover — if you accidentally damage the landlord’s fixtures (e.g., cracked bathroom tiles), you could be liable. Some contents policies include this, others don’t.

What Won’t Be Covered

Contents insurance exclusions to know:

Exclusion Explanation
Gradual deterioration Wear and tear, rot, damp — long-term damage only
Unattended valuables Phone left on car seat, bag left unattended in public
Business equipment Laptops used for work may require business cover or endorsement
Cash over limit Usually capped at £200–£500 in cash
Motor vehicles Cars have their own insurance; contents doesn’t cover them
Items not at home address Unless you have away-from-home cover

Sources

  1. ABI — Home insurance