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Homeowner Advice

General tips and advice for homeowners covering maintenance, seasonal tips and everyday property care.

Homeowner Advice

Renewing Your Home Insurance? Save £££s

If you’re looking to save money on your home insurance this year, it makes sense to shop around. Home insurance is important to keep your property safe, but it can be hard to find the best value policy. Check out our useful tips for getting the best deals.

If you’re looking to save money on your home insurance this year, it makes sense to shop around. Home insurance is important to keep your property safe, but it can be hard to find the best value policy. Check out our useful tips for getting the best deals.

Shop Around

Often, people simply renew their existing policy or, if they are buying a new home, they take out insurance via their mortgage provider. This may be easy and convenient, but it isn’t necessarily the best value. Make sure you shop around for other policies before committing.

Increase Your Excess

The excess is the amount that you commit to paying on any future claims that you make and the higher your excess, the lower your insurance premium. You will need to find the balance between how much you could afford to pay and how much a larger voluntary excess will save you.

Combine Your Cover

Homeowners need home and contents insurance. You may need to renew other insurance policies, too, such as high-value items or vehicles. The more policies you can combine, the better deal you are likely to get from your insurance provider.

Be Honest

It may seem like a good idea to undervalue your property and contents, but if you are not realistic about the values, you won’t be covered. If you need policy extras, make sure you add them to your policy; failure to do so may save a little money now, but could cost you a lot in the future.

Don’t Overestimate

Home insurers will ask you to provide the cost of rebuilding your home. Don’t just enter the current value of your property as that value includes the land that your house stands on, too. If you need to rebuild your home, you won’t have to buy the land again, so the rebuild cost will be considerably less than the value of your home. A surprisingly high number of homeowners pay too much insurance because they are over-insured on rebuild costs.

Choose Annual Payments

Paying by monthly direct debit is easy and convenient, but it costs more in the long run. If you can afford to, pay annually and save money.

Think Before You Claim

Making small claims can have a dramatic effect on your insurance premium. So try not to claim for smaller items; having a larger excess will help you to avoid this. As you build your no claims bonus, you will be able to get cheaper home insurance.

If you have done all of the above, there are minor home improvements you can make to further reduce your home insurance. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter or Google+ for more advice on reducing your insurance premium.

Looking for more homeowner advice advice?

Find clear, practical answers to common homeowner advice questions, helping homeowners understand everyday issues, know what checks they can carry out safely, and when it is best to contact a qualified professional.

  • What home repairs should I never attempt myself?

    Gas work - full stop. Any work on gas appliances must be done by a Gas Safe registered engineer by law. Structural changes like removing walls, altering roof timbers, or touching anything load-bearing need professional assessment and often Building Regulations sign-off. Electrical work involving the consumer unit or new circuits must meet Part P. And if your property was built before 2000, be aware asbestos may be present - it can only be handled by a licensed specialist.

  • Which home improvements add the most value to a property?

    Improvements that add usable space or modernise the rooms buyers scrutinise most tend to deliver the strongest returns. Loft conversions consistently top the list - adding a bedroom and bathroom can add more value than the work costs in many areas. Kitchen and bathroom updates are next. Open-plan ground-floor extensions connecting to a kitchen-diner have become one of the most sought-after layouts in UK family homes. And energy improvements - insulation, a new boiler, solar panels - are increasingly influencing buyer decisions as running costs become a bigger part of the conversation.

  • Should I renovate my home or move house?

    There's no universal right answer - it depends on your situation. Moving gets you what you want without living through a building site, but stamp duty, estate agent fees, and moving costs can easily add up to tens of thousands of pounds. Renovating lets you stay put and invest in your own property, but comes with disruption and unexpected costs. The most useful comparison: get a clear view of what your home could realistically be worth after the work, and what a move would actually cost end to end. A local estate agent and a builder's quote can give you those two numbers.

  • What does a home survey actually cover and do I need one when buying?

    A survey is an independent assessment of a property's condition carried out by a qualified surveyor - separate from the mortgage valuation, which only tells the lender what the property is worth, not what's wrong with it. A HomeBuyer Report flags visible defects and anything that needs further investigation. A Full Building Survey goes deeper and is worth the extra cost on older, larger, or unusual properties. Given that a house is likely the biggest purchase you'll ever make, skipping the survey to save a few hundred pounds is a false economy - a single missed issue can cost far more to put right.

  • What should I do before starting any major home improvement project?

    Get your paperwork in order before anyone picks up a tool. Check whether you need planning permission or Building Regulations approval. Find out whether a Party Wall Agreement applies. Confirm your home insurance covers you during the works. Get at least three written quotes and make sure the scope of work is clearly agreed in writing with whoever you hire. And have a contingency budget - on almost any renovation, something unexpected comes up. The projects that go smoothly are usually the ones that were properly planned before they started.

  • What is the difference between freehold and leasehold and why does it matter for home improvements?

    If you own the freehold, you own the property and the land it sits on outright - you can generally do what you like subject to planning rules. If you own a leasehold property (common with flats), you own the right to live there for the remaining lease term, but the freeholder owns the building. This matters for home improvements because many leases require you to get the freeholder's written permission before making alterations - sometimes even internal ones. Always check your lease before starting any work, as doing alterations without the required consent can cause problems when you come to sell.

Have a question about TrustATrader?

If you have a question in relation to TrustATrader specifically, please check out the TrustATrader FAQs, with separate lists tailored to consumers and tradespeople. Alternatively, get in touch with our team. We're happy to help!