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Best buildings insurance 2024

We reveal the best buildings policies for your home and explain whether storms, floods and damp are covered
Dean SobersSenior researcher & writer
Best buildings insurance

What is buildings insurance?

Buildings insurance covers the cost of repairing damage to the structure of your property.

Homeowners often combine this with contents insurance, which protects your belongings from loss, theft or damage.

We've analysed 75 buildings insurance policies - here we reveal our scores and Which? Best Buy policies.

  • Want the best buildings insurance? Check our ratings table below, than go to confused.com, another comparison site, or direct to the insurer.
  • Want the cheapest buildings insurance? Go to confused.com, or another comparison site, to get a list of policies. Then check what the policies scored by searching our ratings table.
  • Want combined buildings and contents insurance? Go to our best home insurance page.

Please note that the information in this article is for information purposes only and does not constitute advice. Please refer to the particular terms and conditions of an insurer before committing to any financial products.

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Best buildings insurance policies

You can search for a policy in our table and click on the links to see our full reviews of insurers.

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NatWest Premier Home Insurance
84%

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84%
M&S Premier Home Insurance
83%
79%
79%
79%
Bank of Scotland Gold Home Insurance
79%

Table note: last updated September 2024. Next update: September 2025. Buildings score based on our experts' rating of the insurance policy. See our full methodology below.

Do I need buildings insurance?

If you're a homeowner, buildings cover is more likely to be an essential than a 'nice-to-have'.

If you're using a mortgage to buy your property, your lender will usually state that you need buildings insurance in place from the date of exchange to get the mortgage.

Even if you don't have a mortgage, it's advisable to take out a buildings insurance policy, bearing in mind how much it would cost to rebuild your house if it was damaged or destroyed.

In some cases, you may not need your own buildings insurance – if, for example, you live in a block of flats where the building as a whole has a policy paid for through your service charge.

You also don't need buildings insurance if you're renting a property, as it will be up to your landlord to make sure there's cover in place. However, if you want to insure your belongings, you may want to take out a contents insurance policy.

What does buildings insurance cover?

Buildings insurance covers almost everything you wouldn't take with you if you moved home.

This includes the walls, windows and roof, as well as permanent fixtures and fittings such as baths, toilets and fitted kitchens. 

As a general rule, buildings insurance covers the cost of rebuilding your house from the ground up. This sum is likely to differ from the market value of your home and often includes the cost of services such as demolition, site clearance and architects' fees.

Generally, buildings insurance covers the cost of loss or damage caused by:

  • fire, smoke, explosions
  • flood, storms, natural disasters
  • fallen trees, lamp posts, aerials or satellite dishes
  • vandalism or malicious damage
  • subsidence
  • vehicle or aircraft collisions

Depending on the type of policy you choose, you may also be covered for structures around your home, such as a garage, outside walls and driveways.

Check you're getting a great deal and search for a new home insurance policy using the service provided by Confused.com. Get a quote now

Don't give insurers a reason to turn down your claim

Dean Sobers

Dean Sobers, Which? insurance expert, says: 'For most homeowners, the value of good buildings cover is clear. Many of us would face financial ruin without this protection if something catastrophic - like a fire or flood - wrecked our homes.

'So it's all the more disturbing that buildings insurers are some of the least likely to pay out. Data from the Financial Conduct Authority shows that more than a third of claims on buildings-only policies went unpaid in 2023, while three in 10 claims on combined buildings and contents policies were rejected.

'There are different ways of interpreting these comparatively dismal figures, but a key takeaway is the necessity of ensuring that when you buy your cover, you're not inadvertently seeding future disappointment. 

'Insurers ask various questions about your circumstances when you apply. If you're found to have been 'careless' in answering, this could result in a future claim being dismissed or reduced. For example, guesstimating the type of locks on your doors or windows, the proximity of trees or the way your property was built could lead to your insurer later arguing that it provided cover based on false assumptions. 

'During the slick, streamlined process of buying insurance, it's not always clear how consequential some honest mistakes can be. If you're not certain of the information that's being asked of you, or even precisely what it is the insurer wants to know, it's worth taking the time to contact the insurer to make sure you're on the same page.'

More on buildings insurance

How we analyse buildings insurance

Buildings policy score

Our buildings policy score is our assessment of how comprehensive a policy would be for buildings-only cover.

In July 2024, we surveyed 33 insurance companies about the levels of cover in their policies. We rated 26 elements of buildings contents cover, and 25 additional features that apply to both buildings and contents cover - such as admin fees. The higher the policy score, the more the more comprehensive the cover overall.

Certain elements are weighted to have more or less of an impact on the policy score based on the general level of importance we think it has.

Which? Best Buys

Our Best Buys are the individual products that stood out as being the most comprehensive in our analysis. 

Our Best Buy award doesn't reflect customer service (although you can see which home insurers were also rated highly by customers in our best home insurance guide). However, we won't make a provider a Best Buy where there's evidence - either from our surveys or from Financial Conduct Authority or Financial Ombudsman Service data - of poor service or a poorer-than-average record of paying claims.

Policies named as Best Buys for buildings cover have a minimum policy score of 75%

Additionally, we look at how consistently good the cover is in policies. To make the cut, a policy needs to have scored at least three out of five points in two-thirds of the areas we've rated.

Lastly, all Best Buy buildings policies must have - or make available - the following levels of cover as a minimum: 

  • Flood, storm, subsidence and accidental damage cover; cover for burst or blocked pipes; trace and access cover (£5,000); alternative accommodation (£50,000); property owner liability (£1m); replacement of locks or keys for external doors (£500); home emergency cover (£500 and includes the central heating system)

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