ePrivacy and GPDR Cookie Consent by Cookie Consent A guide to insurance, construction, and protecting your home

A guide to insurance, construction, and protecting your home

4 min read
Oct '25 • by Heather

Quick summary

To protect your home during construction, ensure your contractor has public liability and employer liability insurance, which should be renewed annually and cover injuries or damage to third parties and workers. Consider additional cover like contractors all risk or structural warranty, especially for long-term protection. Always ask for up-to-date proof before work starts.

After planning and building regulations, we can understand why a lot of homeowners feel overwhelmed with the admin. Perhaps not too enthused when it comes to reviewing their contract with potential builders.

However, the construction phase is where the majority of a budget will be spent and risk should be managed as proactively as possible.

One area that all homeowners should pay careful attention to is their insurance. Whether this is the insurance your contractor should be covered by or the insurance you should be taking out yourself - nothing is more important for the safety of your project.

To make sure you’re fully covered, here’s our guide to everything insurance…

Public liability insurance

This insurance is used if your contractors work near other people and their property - which covers pretty much all construction projects.

It offers legal protection in the event a third party (a non-employee) is injured, or if someone’s property is damaged. Your contractor should renew this insurance every 12 months, so make sure it’s up to date when looking through your contract.

Resi asks contractors to provide this as part of joining the platform. However, we're not liable for these details so always be sure to ask for them and see an in-date copy prior to works starting.

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