OT Insurance Borkers - foreign travel and empty UK house
"geoff" wrote in message
...
In message , tim.....
writes
"Hugh - in either England or Spain" wrote in
message ...
On 10/11/2012 19:20, Tim+ wrote:
Simon Cee wrote:
On Fri, 09 Nov 2012 14:43:56 +0100, Hugh - in either England or Spain
wrote:
b. Home insurance for the UK house which is unoccupied for up to 3
months at a time
While trying to sell a house of a deceased relative a few years ago,
after much searching, found nobody would cover if empty for more than
5 [?] weeks. Nobody.
When we went to sell my wife's 99 year old aunt's house after she went
into
a home, we were warned about insurance problems if it was empty for too
long. As it had *never* been insured, it was hard to lose too much
sleep
over it.
Tim
Thanks for the various replies so far.
The house is checked most weeks. the heating is on low, burglar alarm
functioning, varous lights on random switching etc.
I used to work in the insurance industry and didn't think it would be
easy. I will have to ask some of the other part time ex-pats out here
what they have arranged or whether they just chance it.
I suspect that most of them don't realise that "bog standard" insurance
doesn't cover them.
Just like most people don't realise that an "annual" multi-trip travel
insurance policy doesn't cover you for one 12 month long trip (or even one
3 month long one).
My philosophy is to only insure what you can't afford to lose
the trend is to get people to over insure them selves for every
possibility
In all my years of travel and expatmanship, basic bricks and mortar
insurance was all I needed. As for travel insurance - for what for
extended trips ? health insurance, the couple of times I've needed medical
attention (10 stitches in my arm when I impaled myself on a fence) the
cost didn't even exceed the policy excess
If I were to have died ? past caring
And if you are in a motor accident, perhaps not even of your fault?
You do know that compulsory third party insurance in many US states is
no-where near enough to pay for this, don't you.
tim
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