If you are comparing policy structures, occupancy-specific cover, and claims strategy, use the Home Insurance Hub as your main navigation page.
Your landlord’s insurance doesn’t cover your stuff. Here’s why contents insurance matters for renters and how to get the right cover.
What Your Landlord’s Insurance Does and Doesn’t Cover
| Covered by landlord’s policy | NOT covered (you need your own) |
|---|---|
| Building structure | Your furniture |
| Fitted carpets (landlord’s) | Your electronics |
| Kitchen units and bathroom | Your clothes and shoes |
| Boiler and heating system | Your jewellery and watches |
| Landlord’s fixtures | Your kitchen equipment |
| Liability to neighbours | Your personal belongings |
What Contents Insurance Covers for Renters
| Cover | What it protects |
|---|---|
| Fire and smoke damage | All your belongings |
| Theft and burglary | Possessions stolen from your home |
| Flood and water damage | Items damaged by flooding or burst pipes |
| Storm damage | Possessions damaged by storms |
| Accidental damage (optional) | Items you accidentally break |
| Personal possessions (optional) | Items outside the home (phone, laptop) |
| Temporary accommodation | Living costs if your rental is uninhabitable |
| Tenants’ liability (optional) | Damage to landlord’s property (e.g., broken window) |
| Personal liability (optional) | If someone is injured in your home |
How Much Are Your Belongings Worth?
Most people underestimate. Use this checklist:
| Room/Category | Typical value |
|---|---|
| Electronics (TV, laptop, phone, tablet, games console) | £2,000-£5,000 |
| Furniture (bed, sofa, tables, storage) | £2,000-£5,000 |
| Clothes and shoes | £2,000-£5,000 |
| Kitchen equipment (appliances, cookware, crockery) | £500-£2,000 |
| Bedding and towels | £200-£500 |
| Books, music, DVDs | £200-£1,000 |
| Jewellery and watches | £500-£5,000 |
| Sports equipment, hobbies | £200-£2,000 |
| Bathroom and personal care | £100-£300 |
| Bicycle | £200-£2,000 |
| Typical total | £8,000-£30,000 |
Could you afford to replace everything at once?
How Much Does It Cost?
Renters contents insurance is typically very affordable:
| Cover level | Monthly cost | Annual cost |
|---|---|---|
| £10,000 contents | £4-£8 | £48-£96 |
| £20,000 contents | £6-£12 | £72-£144 |
| £30,000 contents | £8-£16 | £96-£192 |
| £40,000 contents | £10-£20 | £120-£240 |
Add-ons like accidental damage, personal possessions away from home, and tenants’ liability typically add £3-£8/month.
What Affects the Price?
| Factor | Effect on premium |
|---|---|
| Location (postcode) | Higher crime areas cost more |
| Type of property | Ground floor flat costs more (easier break-in) |
| Security (locks, alarm) | Better security = lower premium |
| Claims history | Previous claims increase cost |
| Cover level | More cover = higher premium |
| Excess chosen | Higher excess = lower premium |
Tenants’ Liability — The Hidden Essential
This covers accidental damage to your landlord’s property:
| Scenario | Without tenants’ liability | With tenants’ liability |
|---|---|---|
| You flood the kitchen (left tap on) | You pay for repairs (£1,000+) | Insurer covers it |
| Burn mark on landlord’s carpet | Deducted from deposit + extra | Insurer covers it |
| Crack landlord’s bath | You pay | Insurer covers it |
| Fire from your cooking | You could face huge liability | Insurer covers it |
Tenants’ liability is usually cheap to add (£1-£3/month) and protects your deposit.
When You Might Not Need It
| Situation | Why you might skip it |
|---|---|
| Very few belongings | Replacement cost less than a year’s premiums |
| Living temporarily | Short stay with minimal possessions |
| University student | Parent’s policy may cover you (check) |
| Shared house with limited valuables | Risk is lower, but still exists |
Even in these cases, tenants’ liability is worth having for the deposit protection alone.
How to Get the Best Deal
- Compare on price comparison sites — MoneySupermarket, Compare the Market, GoCompare
- Check if you can add to a family policy — if you’re young, parents may add you
- Choose the right excess — higher excess lowers premiums
- Don’t over-insure — cover what you actually own
- Check for multi-policy discounts — some insurers bundle with car insurance
- Consider a specialist renter policy — designed specifically for tenants
New for Old vs Indemnity
| Settlement type | How it works | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| New for old | Replaces with brand new equivalent | Most possessions |
| Indemnity | Pays current market value (with wear and tear) | Cheaper premiums |
New for old is better — your 5-year-old laptop gets replaced with a current equivalent, not valued at its second-hand price.
Related Guides
- Home Insurance Guide — buildings and contents explained
- How to Make an Insurance Claim — step-by-step process
- Life Insurance Guide — broader protection
- Emergency Fund Guide — building financial resilience