Home Insurance for Non-Standard Construction: Concrete, Timber Frame, Thatched and Flat Roof Properties
Standard home insurance is designed for brick walls and a tiled or slate roof. Anything outside that definition is non-standard construction – and standard comparison sites will either return no quotes or very expensive ones because they cannot accurately rate the risk. Non-standard construction properties need a specialist insurer or broker who understands the specific rebuild requirements, the genuine risk profile, and the policy conditions that apply. The four most common non-standard construction types in the UK – concrete and prefab, timber frame, thatched roofs, and flat roofs – each have entirely different insurance considerations, costs, and conditions that this guide sets out in full.
What Is Standard Construction? The Benchmark Everything Else Is Measured Against
Standard construction, for home insurance purposes, means a property with brick or stone walls and a pitched roof covered in tiles or slate. This is the construction type that mainstream insurers have the most claims data for, the most repair contractors available for, and the most predictable rebuild costs from. Everything outside this definition sits in the non-standard market.
Non-standard does not mean uninsurable. It means the property requires an insurer who understands its specific risk profile and can accurately assess what it would cost to repair or rebuild using the correct materials and specialist trades. The consequence of a standard insurer covering a non-standard property is the same as using the wrong policy for any non-standard risk: an inadequate settlement at claim time, or a declined claim because the insurer’s rating assumptions were wrong.
Quick Facts
- ✓There are approximately 60,000 thatched properties in England. Around 80% are listed buildings. Average combined thatched home insurance rose from £598 in January 2022 to £2,404 by January 2026 – an increase of over 300% in four years
- ✓Over 156,500 prefabricated homes were built in the UK between 1945 and 1958. Many named types – Airey, BISF, Wimpey No-Fines, Reema – remain occupied today and each has different insurance and mortgage implications
- ✓Timber frame insurance typically carries a premium loading of 10-15% above a comparable brick property for a modern build. Older historic timber frame with wattle and daub can be significantly higher
- ✓If less than 30% of your roof is flat, most insurers do not treat it as a non-standard property at all. The non-standard classification applies only when flat roofing is a significant proportion of the total roof area
- ✓Non-standard construction properties always require a professionally assessed reinstatement cost rather than a BCIS online calculator figure. The BCIS calculator is designed for standard brick and tile only
Key Takeaways
- →Standard comparison sites cannot accurately rate non-standard construction risk. They return no quotes or inflated estimates because their pricing engines are built for brick and tile. A specialist insurer or broker who understands the specific construction type is always needed
- →The rebuild cost for non-standard properties is almost always higher than for equivalent standard homes. Specialist materials, specialist trades, and restricted supply chains for heritage materials all push rebuild costs well above standard construction equivalents
- →Non-standard construction policies carry specific conditions – maintenance requirements, inspection obligations, and prohibited activities – that standard policies do not. Breach of these conditions can invalidate a claim even when the event itself is covered
- →The named type of non-standard construction matters enormously for insurance. A BISF house, a Wimpey No-Fines, and an Airey house are all “prefab concrete” to a standard insurer but have completely different structural characteristics, risk profiles, and insurability in the specialist market
- →Modern non-standard construction – new-build timber frame, engineered timber panels, modern flat roof membranes – is far easier to insure than older non-standard properties and often attracts only a modest loading above standard construction rates
When a homeowner with a thatched cottage, a Wimpey No-Fines semi, a Victorian timber-framed barn conversion, or a 1960s flat-roofed bungalow approaches a standard comparison site for home insurance, one of two things happens: they receive no quotes at all, or they receive quotes so expensive they appear unaffordable. Neither outcome is representative of the actual specialist market. Both result from the same cause – standard comparison pricing engines are built around brick walls and tiled roofs, and any departure from that template is beyond their rating capability. This guide explains each major non-standard construction type, what makes it difficult to insure on standard terms, what specialist insurers need to know, and what the coverage and conditions look like. For specialist quotes, visit our non-standard home insurance comparison page.
Expert Note – MMC Home Insurance Specialists | FCA Reg. 916241
“The most consistent problem we see with non-standard construction insurance is underinsurance on the rebuild cost. A thatched cottage purchased for £500,000 can genuinely require £1 million or more to rebuild – the specialist materials, the listed building consent requirements, and the scarcity of qualified thatchers all drive the cost far beyond what a standard online calculator would suggest. Getting the sum insured right requires a professional reinstatement cost assessment from a chartered surveyor with experience of the specific construction type. Using the BCIS online tool for a thatched or timber-framed listed building will typically produce a figure that is materially and dangerously below the true reinstatement cost.”
Non-standard construction types: a quick reference comparison
The four main non-standard construction categories each present different challenges for insurers and homeowners. The table below gives a snapshot overview before each type is covered in full detail below.
| Construction Type | Primary Insurance Risk | Availability on Standard Market | Typical Premium vs Standard | Rebuild Cost Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thatched roof | Fire – highly combustible materials, rapid spread | Very limited. Specialist only | Average £2,404 (Jan 2026) vs £379 standard – over 5x | Frequently 2x market value. Professional reinstatement cost assessment essential |
| Timber frame (historic) | Fire spread, rot, woodworm, wattle and daub repair costs | Specialist required | Significantly higher than standard, depending on age and condition | Often substantially above market value due to specialist materials and trades |
| Timber frame (modern) | Perception more than reality for newer builds | Some standard insurers will cover | 10-15% above comparable brick; nil for some new builds | Closer to standard, but specialist rebuild skills still needed |
| Concrete / prefab (post-war) | Structural steel corrosion (in some types), repair material scarcity | Most standard insurers decline | Higher than standard; depends heavily on named type | RICS assessment required. Some types have restricted insurer panels |
| Flat roof (<30% of total) | Water pooling, shorter membrane lifespan, burglar access | Usually standard market at low loading | Minor loading only if less than 30% of total roof | Closer to standard rebuild costs |
| Flat roof (>30% of total) | Above – more significant exposure | Some specialist input needed | Meaningful loading; depends on membrane type and age | As standard rebuild except for roof membrane replacement costs |
Thatched roof home insurance: why the market has contracted and what you need to know
Thatched property insurance is in a state of acute market stress in 2026. Average premiums have risen over 300% since 2022, several major specialist insurers have withdrawn from the market entirely, and the pool of available underwriters is shrinking. Understanding why this is happening, and what it means practically for thatched property owners, is the most urgent insurance issue in the non-standard home market.
Why thatched properties are so expensive and difficult to insure
Thatch is inherently combustible. A fire in a thatched roof spreads faster and is harder to extinguish than in a tiled property, and the materials above the firebreak (if one exists) can be lost entirely in a single incident. A thatched cottage bought for £500,000 can carry a genuine rebuild cost of £1 million or more, because the cost to rebuild a thatched listed property involves specialist thatchers (a diminishing trade), heritage materials sourced through restricted supply chains, listed building consent for every element of reconstruction, and a rebuild period measured in years rather than months. Standard fire claims average £30,000-£40,000. Thatched fire claims routinely reach hundreds of thousands.
The market contraction – major insurers including Home & Legacy and Midas exiting in recent years – has concentrated remaining capacity among a smaller number of specialist underwriters. Those remaining have repriced sharply to reflect genuine claims costs rather than the historically underpriced premiums that preceded the correction.
| Factor | Detail | Insurance Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Thatch type | Water reed lasts 40+ years. Combed wheat reed and long straw last 20-25 years. The type must be declared. Some policies cover only specific materials – check the schedule | Age and condition of thatch affects the risk assessment and premium. An older or poorly maintained roof in need of re-thatching is harder to insure and carries higher risk of a declined claim if maintenance obligations were not met |
| Listed building status | Approximately 80% of UK thatched properties are listed. Grade II is most common; Grade I and II* carry higher rebuild complexity and cost | Listed status requires any reinstatement to use historically appropriate materials and methods. This materially raises rebuild cost and extends reinstatement time. Alternative accommodation cover of at least 2-3 years is appropriate |
| Chimney configuration | A chimney penetrating a thatched roof is the single highest fire risk. Embers and soot deposits on or near thatch can ignite hours after a fire in the grate appears extinguished | Annual chimney sweeping is a policy condition on almost all thatched property policies. Failure to sweep and maintain evidence of this creates grounds to decline a fire claim. More frequent sweeping is required with heavy use |
| Electrical system | Older properties often have ageing wiring. Electrical faults are a significant cause of thatched property fires | Most specialist insurers require an Electrical Installation Condition Report (EICR) every 5-7 years. Remedial works recommended in the report should be carried out promptly. Retain documentation |
| Fire protection measures | Smoke detectors, heat detectors, fire-resistant barrier (aluminium foil under thatch or firebreaker mat), sprinkler systems where fitted | Some insurers require a fire-resistant barrier as a policy condition. Presence of sprinklers or monitored smoke detection systems can materially reduce the premium. Naked flames in the loft or attic space are prohibited by virtually all thatched policies |
| BBQ and open fire restrictions | Outdoor fires and BBQs must be sited at a sufficient distance from the property. Most policies specify a minimum distance or require that BBQs are never used directly under or adjacent to the roof | A fire claim where a BBQ or outdoor fire was the ignition source within a restricted zone is likely to be disputed. Check your specific policy wording for distance requirements |
The Thatched Premium Crisis: What Has Happened and What to Expect
Average thatched property insurance premiums have risen from £598 in January 2022 to £2,404 in January 2026 – a rise of over 300% in four years (Compare the Market data). This compares to a broader UK home insurance market where average premiums have begun to ease from their 2024 peak. Thatched properties will not follow the mainstream downward trend.
- →The price rise reflects a genuine correction: premiums were historically too low relative to claims costs. The correction accelerated as several insurers exited the market
- →The remaining specialist insurers are pricing to reflect true claims costs. Shopping the market remains important: the gap between the best and worst quote from the available specialist panel can be significant
- →Actions that genuinely reduce the premium: installing a firebreaker mat or aluminium barrier, fitting a monitored smoke detection system, documenting chimney and electrical maintenance, and ensuring the rebuild sum insured is accurately based on a professional assessment
- →The BCIS online rebuild cost calculator should not be used for thatched properties. A specialist reinstatement cost assessment by a chartered surveyor is essential to avoid the catastrophic underinsurance that characterises the majority of thatched property claims
Timber frame home insurance: historic versus modern, and what matters to underwriters
Timber frame is not a single construction type. It encompasses everything from a medieval oak-framed hall house with wattle and daub infill panels, through a 1970s timber kit home, to a modern engineered timber SIP panel new build. The insurance treatment of these is completely different. The age and type of the timber frame determines the risk profile, the insurer appetite, and the premium far more than the fact that timber is involved.
| Timber Frame Type | Key Characteristics | Insurance Treatment | What Insurers Need |
|---|---|---|---|
| Historic / medieval oak frame (pre-1900) | Oak structural frame with wattle and daub, lathe and plaster, or brick infill panels. Usually listed. Very high rebuild complexity and cost | Specialist only. Very limited insurer panel. Premium reflects the genuine scarcity of oak frame specialists and heritage repair skills | Listed status, approximate age, infill panel type (wattle and daub or later replacement), last structural inspection, presence of thatched roof, RICS reinstatement assessment |
| Barn conversion | Often a mix of historic timber frame and modern construction inserted within an original agricultural structure. May be listed. Unique floor plans and non-standard dimensions | Specialist insurer usually required, particularly if listed or if original structural timbers are exposed. Rebuild cost is complex to calculate | Original structure age and condition, planning history, any listed constraints, details of original timbers versus modern insertion, professional reinstatement assessment |
| 1960s-1980s timber kit homes | Factory-built timber panel construction, common in Scotland and some parts of England and Wales. Often brick-clad externally so the timber frame is not visible | Standard market sometimes declines; some specialist policies available. Risk of hidden rot if moisture management has failed. Premium loading typically modest for well-maintained properties | Confirmation of construction type (often revealed only in the surveyor’s report), evidence of condition and maintenance, any previous structural work |
| Modern new-build timber frame (post-2000) | Engineered structural insulated panels (SIPs), I-joists, and modern timber systems built to current Building Regulations. Often more energy-efficient than equivalent brick | Easiest to insure. Some standard insurers will accept at no loading or minimal loading. Many specialist non-standard policies available. Not historically high risk if well-built and maintained | Construction year, timber system type (SIP, I-joist, platform frame), Building Regulations compliance, fire detection. Structural engineer’s report not usually required for recent builds |
The four risks that timber frame insurers price
| Risk | Why It Matters | How to Mitigate |
|---|---|---|
| Fire spread | Timber burns faster than masonry. In an unprotected void space between the inner and outer leaf of a timber frame, fire can travel through the structure without triggering alarms until significant structural damage is done | Mains-connected smoke detectors in every room and on every floor. Heat detectors in kitchen. Regular checks that firebreaks (required under Building Regulations for modern builds) are intact. Fire suppression systems are beneficial for historic properties |
| Rot and decay | Timber that retains moisture will rot over time. In older properties with failed damp proofing, inadequate ventilation, or persistent water ingress, structural timbers can be compromised over years without visible external evidence | Keep gutters, downpipes, and drainage clear. Maintain external render or cladding. Address any water ingress promptly. Periodic inspection of roof void and subfloor spaces. Note: rot from wear and tear will not be covered – sudden rot discovered after an escape of water event may be covered |
| Woodworm and beetle infestation | Wood-boring beetles require moisture to survive. Old or damp timbers in historic properties are most susceptible. Active infestation weakens structural integrity and can be expensive to treat and repair | Pest damage arising during the policy period from a sudden onset is potentially covered. Pre-existing infestation will be excluded and is a material fact to declare at inception. Have timbers inspected as part of any homebuyer survey |
| Flood vulnerability | Masonry is more resilient to water ingress and drying out than timber. A timber-framed property that floods may sustain more structural damage per inch of water depth than an equivalent brick property | If the property is in a flood-risk area, confirm whether flood cover is included or whether the Flood Re scheme applies. Flood Re voluntary excess does not apply. See our guide to non-standard home insurance for flood-risk properties |
Concrete and prefab home insurance: why the specific named type matters
Post-war prefabricated homes are frequently lumped together by standard insurers under “prefab” or “concrete” and declined. In the specialist market, the named construction type is everything. A Wimpey No-Fines is a very different structural proposition from an Airey house or a BISF. Understanding which type you have, and being able to name it precisely to an insurer, is the starting point for getting appropriate cover.
| Type Name | Construction Method | Key Structural Risk | Insurance Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wimpey No-Fines | In-situ poured concrete (no fine aggregate) cast on site using reusable formwork. ~300,000 built. Solid walls, typically 13 inches thick | Cracking and water penetration over time. NOT classed as defective under the Housing Defects Act. Parliamentary report found structurally sound | Most reasonable of the post-war types for insurance. Several specialist insurers willing to quote. Classify as “non-standard construction concrete” and specify Wimpey No-Fines |
| BISF (British Iron and Steel Federation) |
Steel structural frame with prefabricated steel panel upper section. Lower half: render on lathe. Often classified for insurance as “prefabricated non-combustible” because the steel panels are non-combustible | Hidden corrosion of the steel frame and cladding panels over decades. Condition assessment of steel can be expensive where access is limited | Insurable with several specialist providers. Correctly classify the upper as “prefabricated non-combustible” and the lower as “rendered/lathe.” Do not classify as simply “prefab” – specify BISF explicitly |
| Airey | Prefabricated concrete columns reinforced with steel tubing salvaged from ex-military vehicles. Column-and-panel system developed post-war | Corrosion of the steel reinforcing within the concrete columns is a widespread and serious structural problem. Many unrepaired Airey houses are structurally compromised. The type is designated defective for mortgage purposes under pre-Housing Defects Act designation | Difficult to insure without structural evidence. Most mainstream and many specialist insurers decline. A structural engineer’s report confirming condition is essential. Some specialists will quote with the right documentation. Mortgage is separately very difficult |
| PRC (Prefabricated Reinforced Concrete) – designated defective types | Various types including Reema Hollow Panel, Cornish Type 1 and 2, Laing Easi-Form, Unity. Constructed from precast concrete panels with reinforcing steel | Corrosion of reinforcing steel, concrete carbonation, and loss of structural integrity in worst cases. Some types designated defective under the Housing Defects Act 1984 | Designated defective types are very difficult to insure or mortgage in unremediated form. PRC Homes Ltd certificate of repair and reinstatement to modern standards dramatically improves both insurability and mortgageability. Some specialist insurers will quote on remediated properties |
| Modern modular / MMC | Modern methods of construction: offsite manufactured volumetric modules or panelised systems assembled on site. Built to current Building Regulations. Increasingly common in new developments | No structural concerns specific to the construction method for new builds. Risk profile similar to standard construction for well-built units | Increasingly mainstream in terms of insurability. Many standard insurers will accept, particularly with manufacturer warranty and NHBC or similar certification. The post-war prefab connotation does not apply |
Pro Tip: How to Identify Your Post-War Construction Type
If you do not know the specific type of your post-war non-traditional construction, the following sources can help identify it before you approach an insurer:
- →Your homebuyer’s or structural survey report – this should specify the construction type if correctly completed
- →The local authority planning records, particularly for properties on post-war council estates – the construction type will typically be recorded
- →A structural engineer or specialist surveyor who can inspect and confirm the construction method – essential for Airey or PRC type properties before approaching any insurer
- →Never declare your construction as simply “concrete” or “prefab” on an insurance proposal without specifying the named type in an accompanying note. Vague declarations can create gaps in cover that are only discovered at claim time
Flat roof home insurance: when it matters and when it does not
Flat roofs are the most common non-standard construction element in UK properties. A flat roof extension on an otherwise standard brick house is not the same insurance risk as a wholly flat-roofed bungalow. The key threshold is proportion: if less than 30% of the total roof area is flat, most insurers treat the property as broadly standard. Above 30%, or for a wholly flat-roofed building, the flat roof becomes a material rating factor.
| Flat Roof Material | Typical Lifespan | Insurance Position | Maintenance Requirements |
|---|---|---|---|
| Felt (traditional built-up) | 10-15 years | Oldest and most problematic for insurers. A felt roof over 15-20 years old will face questions about condition and may be refused or loaded. Many insurers require a recent condition report | Annual inspection recommended. Clear debris and standing water regularly. Replace before end of life to maintain insurability. Keep receipts for work done |
| Bitumen (hot-applied / torch-on) | 15-25 years | Better lifespan than felt and more widely accepted. Age and condition still factored. Condition report may be required for older applications | Annual inspection. Keep all gutters and drains clear. Document the installation date and any repairs made |
| GRP fibreglass | 25-50 years | Increasingly preferred by insurers. Long lifespan, rigid, fewer failure points than felt. More insurers willing to quote at standard or near-standard rates for GRP roofs | Minimal maintenance if correctly installed. Check for cracking at joints. Keep drains clear |
| EPDM rubber membrane | 25-50 years | Good lifespan and increasingly common on extensions. Most specialist insurers comfortable with EPDM. Confirm the membrane type when declaring to insurer | Periodic inspection. Flexible membrane self-seals minor punctures but joints should be checked. Clear debris to prevent ponding |
The critical boundary for flat roof insurance is the age and condition of the membrane, not the fact that it is flat. An insurer’s concern is that an ageing or poorly maintained flat roof will fail gradually rather than suddenly. Gradual water ingress is treated as a maintenance issue (excluded from standard home insurance) rather than a sudden damage event (covered). If your flat roof is beyond its expected lifespan or has visible signs of wear, a condition report from a qualified roofing contractor is the most effective step you can take before approaching an insurer.
What every non-standard construction insurance application needs
Non-standard construction properties cannot be accurately insured from a comparison site form. They require a specialist underwriter who can assess the specific risk. Preparing the right information before approaching any insurer is the difference between a policy that would actually pay at claim time and one that contains the seeds of a future dispute.
| Information Required | Why Underwriters Need It | What Happens Without It |
|---|---|---|
| Precise construction description (named type where applicable) | Determines which underwriters will consider the risk, what conditions apply, and how to accurately rate the rebuild cost | Vague declarations lead to vague policies. A claim where the construction type doesn’t match the policy schedule can be disputed |
| Professional reinstatement cost assessment | The BCIS online calculator does not apply to non-standard properties. Specialist rebuild costs require professional assessment. Underinsurance is catastrophic when specialist repair or rebuild is involved | Underinsurance. If the sum insured is set based on market value or a standard calculator, a major claim will reveal a shortfall that can reach hundreds of thousands of pounds |
| Listed building status (grade and any planning constraints) | Listed status affects what can be done in the event of damage, what materials and methods must be used, and how long reinstatement will take. All of these affect the premium | A listed property insured without declaring listed status may find the insurer declines to pay the additional cost of listed building consent compliance at claim time |
| Maintenance records (chimney sweeping, electrical inspections, roof condition reports) | Most non-standard policies include specific maintenance conditions. Evidence that these have been met protects the policyholder in the event of a claim | A thatched fire claim where chimney sweeping records cannot be produced, or a flat roof leak claim where no maintenance history exists, provides grounds to question whether policy conditions were met |
| Previous claims history on the property | Non-standard construction claims are often expensive and may indicate an ongoing structural vulnerability. Previous claims affect both premium and terms | Non-disclosure of previous claims is a material breach. It can void the policy entirely under the Insurance Act 2015 duty of fair presentation |
Frequently Asked Questions
Important: Information, Not Advice
This article provides general information about home insurance for non-standard construction properties in the UK. It does not constitute regulated insurance, financial, or structural advice. Construction type classifications, insurability assessments, and premium indications vary between insurers and depend on individual property circumstances. Premium figures are market data from Compare the Market (thatched), Confused.com (listed buildings), and industry sources. Always obtain a professional reinstatement cost assessment before insuring a non-standard property. Always disclose all material facts to your insurer. MyMoneyComparison.com Ltd is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), registration number 916241.
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- →Access to specialist non-standard home insurers for thatched, timber frame, concrete/prefab, flat roof, listed buildings, and flood-risk properties – including markets not available through mainstream comparison sites
- →Brokers who understand the specific construction types, the maintenance conditions that apply, and how to set the rebuild sum insured correctly for non-standard properties
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