If you own a coach house you will need a policy that will insure the
whole property including all the garages, your own garage (freehold) and
those on Leasehold to neighbours. These are usually on lease on a 999
year Peppercorn Leasehold.
You must include the Legal Liability
cover you need to protect your liabilities as freeholder to the
leaseholder's, whilst insuring the whole building including the garages
on lease.
Coach House Insurance must include but not be limited to:
• All Perils - these are things like Fire, Storm Flood etc.. including Escape of Water
•
Impact and Collision - This covers the property should anyone hit the
building with a car - such as a slight miss when driving into a garage!
• £2m Property Owners Legal Liability, which is the part of the policy that protects your legal liabilities to the leaseholder.
• Accidental Damage - this is optional, and covers things like a spillage on the sofa, and DIY disasters.
•
Personal Possession Cover - this is also optional and includes your
day-to-day valuables when you take them out of the house - mobile
telephones, handbags, camera's etc...
• Specified Items - you can specify any particular valuables you have over £1,500 in value for example.
Plus much more!
You
can expect all the regular Features and Benefits that Home Insurance
offers whilst tailoring a policy to meet your specific needs of your
property.
Why is it so difficult? There are more
and more of these types of properties being built all the time so it is a
shame that the insurance industry has not kept up, this does make
things difficult for the owners of coach houses and the market is much
more limited. The legal liability aspect of the property arrangement is
something that most insurers do not understand, so they simply decline
cover or impose huge ratings on the premium to cover the risk. The fact
of the matter is that there is no more risk to insuring a coach house as
any other type of property. It comes down to lack of knowledge.
There
are Insurer's who are very skilled at writing good quality bespoke
insurance for these types of properties, you need to look hard enough.
What NOT to do. Never
insure your coach house as a detached house because it is not a
detached house, never insure your coach house as a flat because it is
not a flat. This seems obvious but some people simply change the
description of the property to suit the check box! Any claims made on a
policy with incorrect information submitted by the policy owner will be
rejected. You cannot insure a BMW as a ford and the same logic applies.
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