You will be covered for the full amount under s.75 of the Consumer Credit Act.
Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 (Section 75) provides you with a valuable legal right when you buy goods or services on a credit card. If you buy something costing between �100 and �30,000 on a credit card (but not a debit card), you can claim against your card issuer if something goes wrong. What's more, even if you've only paid a deposit of, say, �1 on your credit card, you can claim a refund of the entire cost of the goods.
So, if goods are damaged, faulty or don't turn up, or the supplier goes bust, your card issuer wears the supplier's shoes and must make good your loss (under what's known as a debtor-creditor-supplier arrangement or connected lender liability).