Film, Media & TV86 mins ago
utilities
9 Answers
I am moving out of my house so the property is now empty. I have informed the council, do I need to inform the utility people, are there any reductions in standard charges from gas elec water thanks
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by auntsallyann. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
im just comparing quotes for building only insurance for vacant properties, i thought this would be expensive but its not too bad, i will also speak with my present insurer and inform them and see if they quote me. i presume as its an empty property i wont need contents, will things like the kitchen/bathroom be covered by buildings ins.
I beg to differ jenniprice - kitchens and bathrooms are normally covered by buildings insurance. Mine always have been. As a rough guide, anything you would not normally take with you when you move house would be "contents". As an example' a carpet would be "contents", but a wood floor would be "buildings". A boiler is "buildings" and a stand alone fridge is "contents". Not a definitive guide but may help. However I recommend asking your insurance company though. I don't think my answer here would help if you had to claim!!
My buildings insurance didn't cover anything like that-maybe they do differ.
Buildings insurance is practically the house as it stands-so if burnt down buildings insurance would cover the re-build of the house, with walls, windows and roof.
Anything else is contents. I know it sounds silly, but you can actually take kitchens with you when move-and a theif can easily steel as kitchen-highly unlikely I know, but thats why it's contents insurance.
Buildings insurance is practically the house as it stands-so if burnt down buildings insurance would cover the re-build of the house, with walls, windows and roof.
Anything else is contents. I know it sounds silly, but you can actually take kitchens with you when move-and a theif can easily steel as kitchen-highly unlikely I know, but thats why it's contents insurance.