Posts with tag: Flood Re

Insuring Your Flood Risk Property

Published On: December 14, 2015 at 5:05 pm

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After the recent extreme weather in northern England, many property owners will be worried about their insurance – how high will my premium be? Will I even get a policy?

But don’t fear. This guide should help you understand how you can sufficiently insure your property.

The risk

About 5m homes, or a sixth of all properties in England, are considered to be at a higher than normal risk of flooding. However, only around half are at risk from rivers or the sea. Rising groundwater, sewer problems and flash flooding could hit the rest.

The Association of British Insurers (ABI) found that just 55% of those living in flood risk areas are aware that their properties are at risk.

Check your property’s risk of flooding at Checkmyfloodrisk.co.uk

Insurance costs

When looking into a home insurance policy, one of the first questions you will be asked is, “Has your home ever flooded?” If you answer yes, you will be asked a lot more questions, your premium will be significantly higher or you may be refused.

Insuring Your Flood Risk Property

Insuring Your Flood Risk Property

Under the terms of an agreement with the Government, insurers should continue covering their existing customers. However, they are free to raise premiums or set extremely high excesses for flooding claims, meaning that many homes remain uninsured. If property owners wish to move to a new insurer, they could be declined altogether.

If you are moving to a high-risk area, it is likely that you will not be offered affordable flooding cover. However, from next year, a new scheme could help you (see next section).

It is definitely worth using a specialist insurance broker or comparing policies yourself – some insurers will calculate the risk better than others. If you have not had any previous flooding incidents, cover should be included in a standard domestic policy.

Most buildings policies will pay to return the property to a habitable condition and for alternative accommodation while work is being completed, which can last nine months or longer.

Contents policies will often replace old items for new up to the maximum payout limit, but not all cover this, so check before you buy.

Flood Re

From April 2016, a new scheme will help alleviate the costs of sky-high insurance. Flood Re will help individual insurers share the flood risk element of a buildings and contents policy; the scheme will pay out future claims for flooding. The initiative is aimed at helping the estimated 350,000 households at significant flood risk who struggle to access affordable insurance.

Under the scheme, there are maximum charges in place that the insurer will ask the consumer to pay for the flood risk component of the policy. This is set by Council tax bands, starting at £210 per year for homes in bands A and B and up to £1,200 a year for band H. This applies to both buildings and contents cover. Consumers buying just one of these will pay less, but this is just for the flood element – the total premium will be higher.

A homeowner in band D will pay £168 to Flood Re for buildings cover, or £108 for contents-only. This may sound like a lot, but will be a huge saving for those in high-risk areas.

Consumers will not have to work out the deal themselves – their insurer will offer them a single premium and the premium will be paid to the scheme. Claims will be handled similarly as they are now, by the insurer.

It is unknown how the scheme will be able to deal with a catastrophic event, but it will help at-risk households access the cover they need at a better price.

Companies and retailers in recently affected areas are not happy that Flood Re does not include business cover.

Buying a property

If you are buying an existing home, the vendor must tell you about any significant flooding incidents when they complete the Law Society’s property information form for conveyancing. Any issues will become clear when you apply for a mortgage, as banks won’t lend money on a home likely to be destroyed by a major flooding event.

The ABI reports that around 20,000 homes are built in flood risk areas every year, including 4,000 in significant risk spots. This is part of the reason the Government has been developing the Flood Re scheme, to ensure there is cover in future.

When the worst happens

Some people that have been hit by serious flooding have compared the experience to a death in the family. They also warn of the difficulty in finding rental accommodation in the days afterwards. If the worst happens to you, the first thing you should do is get on the phone to letting agents – the best rental homes soon go.

After the summer floods of 2007, 2,400 people in Humberside spent months living in caravans, as there was nowhere else to go. However, a caravan could be a good idea. Some residents of Carlisle lived in caravans parked on their drives. This meant that they were around to help the builders when their homes were being rebuilt.

Also be aware that you may not have to throw out as much as you think – furniture may not have been contaminated and can be restored.

The outcome of your insurance claim also seems to depend on the quality of the loss adjustor appointed. In some cases, victims have had to find their own in order to receive fair treatment.

And remember, it is possible to flood-proof your home – install solid flooring and electrical wiring halfway up the wall, which will make a huge difference to rebuilding your property if it is hit.

Flood Re is Wasting Homeowners’ Money

Published On: February 5, 2015 at 10:12 am

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Categories: Property News

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The Government scheme Flood Re, introduced to make home insurance more affordable for those living in areas at risk of flooding, is wasting homeowners’ money, experts claim.

The system covers insurance premiums for properties on flood plains, using a £180m tax on all other families’ home insurance.

The Committee on Climate Change (CCC) was created to advise the Government, and has stated that the costs of Flood Re are three times greater than its benefits.

However, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs says that the scheme makes insurance accessible and affordable.

The CCC is hoping the tax on everybody’s premiums will be reduced. Furthermore, it says that cash should be available to prevent flood damage, instead of just when homes need to be cleaned up after a flood. The CCC thinks that Flood Re is too generous.

Around half a million properties will see their insurance capped under the system. However the CCC believes that just 200,000 of these homeowners would actually struggle to afford their insurance without the assistance.

Flood Re is Wasting Homeowners' Money

Flood Re is Wasting Homeowners’ Money

The CCC says that the cost of Flood Re does not correspond to ordinary Government spending rules, as it offers negative value for money.

Sir John Krebs, chair of the CCC’s adaptation sub-committee, explains: “Flood Re is set to subsidise many hundreds of thousands of households more than the estimated number that might struggle to afford cover in the free market. This makes Flood Re needlessly expensive.”

Sir John has called for the scheme to be reduced and the emphasis changed: “Managing flood risk will always be the best way of securing affordable insurance in the long term. A transition should be achieved by helping high-risk homes become more resilient.

“There is a risk that Flood Re will be counter-productive to the long-term management of flood risk in the UK, as it largely removes the financial incentive for households to take steps to avoid being flooded. As a consequence, the industry levy funding the scheme could spiral.”1

He has also advised managers of the scheme to properly explain to homeowners that they must restore their property to a more resilient state if they do get flooded.

Ministers and the Association of British Insurers (ABI) introduced Flood Re in June 2013.

The scheme was not supposed to make a profit, but the CCC says that insurers benefit from it because their own risk has been reduced.

The Environment Agency predicts that more properties will be at risk of flooding in the future.

The CCC says that Flood Re should be raising awareness, as many of those living in high-risk homes do not know they are living on flood plains.

Read more about the regulations surrounding Flood Re here.

1 http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-31138997

Lack of Flexibility in the Regulations for Flood Re

Published On: October 1, 2014 at 9:39 am

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Categories: Property News

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The British Property Federation (BPF) has raised apprehensions over the lack of flexibility in the regulations for Flood Re, the affordable flood insurance scheme.

Flood Re is an arrangement between the insurance industry and the Government, to make sure that affordable cover is available for those in high flood risk spots. It is designed to ensure cover for all homeowners, however, millions of landlords and owners of leasehold flats will be unprotected against spiralling insurance premiums.

As well as leasehold properties in large blocks, homes in council tax band H and houses built after 2009, Flood Re will exclude private rental homes.

The BPF has been calling the Government to include leasehold properties within the scheme, stating that it is unfair to favour those who live in a house, over those who live in a flat. As there are almost five million leasehold properties in the UK, and a minimum of 800,000 of these in flood risk areas, this leaves many properties unprotected.

Lack of Flexibility in the Regulations for Flood Re

Lack of Flexibility in the Regulations for Flood Re

In their campaign, the BPF has required proof from the Government that leaseholders will not be affected by the exclusion. In their response to a Government consultation, the BPF greeted the Government’s pledge to monitor homes that are not included in the plan.

The regulations show no sign of a method that would allow amendments to Flood Re to include any new types of property at a later date. This has led the BPF to be concerned that the commitment to monitoring other types of property would not have any positive effects.

More issues with the regulations have caused other worries. Common hold properties are considered commercial property by their insurance policies, are included in the scheme. This has caused confusion over who is included, as leasehold properties have been excluded due to their policy being classed as commercial. The BPF have requested clarity from the Government as to why some commercial policies are covered by the scheme.

Furthermore, the regulations do not show any sign as to why the threshold for leasehold blocks included was for blocks of three units or less, consequently excluding any two-up, two-down conversions.

Director of Policy at BPF, Ian Fletcher, says: “There is a last change for Parliament to amend the legislation on Flood Re, so that leaseholders, small businesses, and other groups enjoy the safety net it provides.

“Having been campaigning for the inclusion of leasehold properties in Flood Re for a while, a repeated source of frustration has been the lack of explanation or evidence for many of the decisions made, and the regulations that have been set out so far do not do much to assuage these.

“The Government’s intention to monitor the impact on various excluded groups is welcome, but a suck-it-and-see attitude to affordable flood cover is not ideal for either householders, or people trying to run a small business.”1

1 http://www.landlordtoday.co.uk/news_features/Flood-Re-regulations-fail-to-address-property-industry-concerns