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13 May 2026 23 min read
Commercial Property Insurance for Warehouses
Commercial property insurance for a warehouse covers the building structure, racking, plant and machinery, stock, and business interruption. Key risks specific to warehouses include racking collapse, sprinkler discharge from fire, storm damage to wide-span roofs, and underinsurance from underdeclared racking values and rising rebuild costs. Goods in store are covered while in the warehouse; goods in transit require a separate policy section once loaded onto a vehicle.
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Warehouse Insurance Cover, Explained

Warehouse insurance covers the building structure, permanent fixtures, racking, plant and machinery, stock, and business interruption under a single commercial property policy. The risks warehouses face are distinct from standard commercial premises: wide-span roofs concentrate storm exposure, high racking changes fire behaviour, forklifts introduce constant impact risk, and stock values fluctuate in ways that create underinsurance if declarations aren’t kept current.

  • Racking reinstatement value is almost always underdeclared. Warehouse operators typically insure racking at purchase price. Replacement cost after a collapse includes not just the new racking but structural engineer assessment, floor reinstatement, and SEMA compliance inspection before reuse
  • Goods in store and goods in transit are separate cover triggers. Your property policy covers stock while it’s physically inside the warehouse perimeter. The moment goods move onto a vehicle, that stock falls under goods in transit cover, which is a different policy section with different conditions
  • A compliant sprinkler system installed to BS EN 12845 can reduce your premium by 15-30% or more. The discount depends on the insurer, the racking height, and the specific system design, but sprinkler protection is one of the most reliable premium levers in warehouse insurance
  • Warehouse expansion silently increases your underinsurance gap. Extra bays, additional racking rows, mezzanine floors, and extended yards all increase rebuild cost, but declared values are routinely left unchanged when physical capacity is added

Key Takeaways

  • Warehouse rebuild costs range from approximately £700 to £950 per square metre for basic structures, according to current BCIS data, but this figure rises substantially when you add specialist fire protection systems, high-load floor specifications, dock levellers, refrigeration plant, and compliance costs under the Building Safety Act 2022
  • Around 80% of UK SMEs are underinsured according to Allianz analysis. In warehouse environments, the gap between declared value and true reinstatement cost tends to be larger than in other commercial property types, because racking, specialist plant, and compliance costs are consistently underestimated
  • Third-party stock requires a different type of cover entirely. If you store goods belonging to other businesses, your own property policy only covers your assets. Your liability for the owners’ goods if damaged or lost requires a separate warehouseman’s liability policy, not just a contents extension
  • Business interruption indemnity periods for warehouses should be at least 18-24 months. Most warehouse operators underestimate how long genuine reinstatement takes: planning permission, specialist contractors, racking lead times, and customer relationship recovery all extend the real recovery window well beyond 12 months

💬 From the MMC Commercial Insurance Team | FCA Reg. 916241

“The two things we see most often with warehouse insurance are racking that’s never been properly valued and business interruption set at 12 months when the real recovery timeline is 24. If your racking collapsed tomorrow and you had to replace it from scratch, including the structural engineer sign-off before it could be used again, what would that cost? Most operators honestly don’t know. And if you had to close for six months while rebuilding, would 12 months of gross profit cover the contracts you’d lose and the time to win new ones? That’s the calculation most businesses skip when they set their policy figures.”

A warehouse is not a complicated building from the outside. Four walls, a roof, a loading bay. Inside, it’s a different story. High racking, forklifts, dense stock, electrical plant, sprinkler systems, dock equipment. When something goes wrong in a warehouse, it tends to go wrong at scale. A fork truck clips a racking upright and a full bay comes down. A sprinkler head is activated by a fire and water damage runs across 5,000 square feet of stock. A winter storm lifts a section of wide-span roof and the weather walks in.

What this means for insurance is that the declared values and policy structure that might work fine for a standard commercial unit can leave a warehouse operator seriously exposed. This guide covers the specific risks warehouses face, how cover should be structured, the racking reinstatement issue almost every operator gets wrong, the goods in store versus goods in transit distinction, and how sprinkler systems translate directly into premium savings.

What commercial property insurance covers for a warehouse

A standard warehouse commercial property policy insures the building itself, all permanent fixtures and fittings, racking and mezzanine structures, plant and machinery, and stock. Insured events typically include fire, explosion, storm damage, flood, escape of water, impact, theft following forced entry, and vandalism. Business interruption, employers’ liability, and public liability are usually structured as a combined policy alongside the property section.

For warehouse operators, the property section has a few elements worth understanding in detail, because the boundaries between what’s covered and what isn’t matter more than in simpler commercial premises.

The building. Walls, roof, floors, loading bays, dock levellers, yard surfaces, fixed electrical and lighting systems, fixed heating, sprinkler pipework and heads, and any permanently installed fire protection. Freestanding plant and equipment that could be removed is usually contents, not building. The boundary varies by insurer and matters at claim time.

Contents and racking. Racking systems, mezzanine floors, forklifts and handling equipment, pallet wrap machines, weighing equipment, CCTV and security systems, and any machinery or equipment not fixed to the structure. Forklifts may need to be specifically listed if their value is significant. Racking is the area most commonly underinsured, and we cover this in a dedicated section below.

Stock. The goods stored at the premises, declared at their value at risk. Seasonal fluctuations are important: a warehouse holding twice its normal stock in November and December is significantly underinsured if the policy sum is set on an average year-round figure. Some policies include automatic seasonal uplift clauses; others require you to notify the insurer when stock values increase materially.

What warehouse insurance typically excludes

The exclusions that most commonly cause problems at claim time in warehouse environments:

Gradual deterioration and wear

Worn forklift floor damage, corroded steelwork, failing roof seals, and deteriorating drainage are maintenance issues, not insured events. Even if they eventually cause damage, insurers treat these as failures of upkeep rather than sudden unexpected events.

Mechanical or electrical breakdown

Internal failure of conveyors, dock levellers, refrigeration plant, or forklift charging systems is not a property claim unless it causes fire or another insured event. Breakdown cover is a separate product and needs to be arranged alongside the property policy.

Defective design or installation

Racking that collapses due to poor installation or design fault, rather than an external impact event, may be excluded. This is relevant when self-installed or non-SEMA-compliant racking is involved. The policy covers sudden damage, not failures caused by how the racking was put together.

Unexplained stock shortages

Inventory discrepancies that can’t be attributed to a specific insured event are not covered. If stock goes missing without evidence of theft following forced entry, the policy won’t respond. This catches businesses that discover shrinkage through stocktakes without a corresponding incident record.

Unoccupied premises

Most warehouse policies include a condition that cover is restricted or suspended if the premises are left unoccupied for more than 30-45 days. Businesses that lock up a unit between contracts need specialist unoccupied property cover rather than relying on their active policy to continue applying.

Security condition breaches

Theft and vandalism claims are subject to security conditions being met at the time of loss. If a policy requires an alarm to be set and it wasn’t, or access was left unsecured, the claim can be declined even where the theft itself is not disputed.

Racking reinstatement value: the most common warehouse insurance gap

Most warehouse operators insure their racking at the original purchase price. This is almost always wrong for reinstatement purposes. If racking collapses following an insured event, the cost to reinstate it fully and legally includes more than just new steel: it includes structural engineering assessment of the floor and any damaged surrounds, installation labour, SEMA-standard inspection before the system can be used again, and any upgrades required to meet current regulations that didn’t apply when the original racking was installed.

Pallet racking in the UK typically costs between £30 and £80 per pallet location to purchase and install, depending on height, specification, and supplier. A warehouse with 2,000 pallet locations has racking worth roughly £60,000 to £160,000 at current prices, before any ancillary costs. That figure needs to be accurate and current for the policy to function properly at claim time.

Three specific factors increase the reinstatement cost beyond the racking purchase price itself:

  • Structural engineering fees. After a significant racking collapse, an insurer will typically require a structural engineer to assess whether the floor slab has been damaged before new racking can be installed. In a large bay, that assessment, report, and any floor remediation work can add £5,000 to £20,000 to the total reinstatement cost
  • SEMA inspection requirements. Racking must be inspected by a SEMA-approved racking inspector (SARI) before being returned to use, whether new or reinstated. The Storage Equipment Manufacturers’ Association’s Rack Safety Code requires this inspection, and insurers increasingly require evidence of compliance before closing a racking claim. If the previous installation was non-compliant, the reinstated system must be brought up to standard at the policyholder’s cost
  • Regulatory compliance under current standards. A warehouse racking system installed ten years ago may have been compliant with the fire safety and sprinkler requirements of that time. When it’s reinstated today, it needs to meet current standards, which may require modifications to the sprinkler system design to account for new racking heights or configurations. These costs are not optional and are not covered by a policy that only accounts for the original purchase price

The practical solution is to get racking valued at current replacement cost, including installation, as part of the property valuation process, and to review this figure whenever racking is added, extended, or modified. A RICS-accredited reinstatement cost assessment for a warehouse of any complexity should explicitly include racking, mezzanines, and installed plant as separate declared values, not bundled into a general contents figure.

Goods in store vs goods in transit: where one cover ends and the other begins

This is the distinction that causes more warehouse insurance claim disputes than almost anything else. The two covers have different triggers, different conditions, and are usually different policy sections, sometimes arranged with different insurers.

Scenario Goods in store Goods in transit
Stock sitting on racking inside the warehouse ✔ Covered Not applicable
Stock in the loading bay, being loaded onto a vehicle ⚠ Depends on policy wording ⚠ Not yet loaded
Stock on a vehicle in the yard, doors closed ✘ Policy may not cover ✔ Usually covered once loaded
Stock on a vehicle that has left the site ✘ Not covered ✔ Covered (with GIT policy)
Inbound delivery on the vehicle, not yet unloaded ✘ Not yet in store ✔ Carrier or GIT cover applies

The loading bay is the grey area where most disputes arise. Goods being actively loaded or unloaded may fall between two policies if neither is clearly worded to cover the loading process itself. Some commercial property policies extend to goods within the warehouse perimeter including the yard; others end at the building line. Some goods in transit policies start from the moment goods are first handled for loading; others only trigger when the vehicle leaves the site.

The right approach is to confirm with your broker exactly where the property policy ends and the GIT policy begins, get that confirmation in writing, and make sure there’s no gap between them. For warehouse operators managing inbound and outbound stock for clients, this boundary review should happen whenever the logistics operation changes.

For operators carrying other businesses’ goods, there’s a third dimension: your own property policy covers your assets, not the owners’ stock. If a client’s goods are damaged while in your care, custody, and control inside the warehouse, that’s a liability exposure covered by a warehouseman’s liability policy, not your contents section. For an overview of courier-side transit cover requirements, see our guide to goods in transit insurance for couriers.

Compare Commercial Property Insurance for Your Warehouse

Get quotes from specialist commercial insurers who understand warehouse risks, racking values, and the correct structure for goods in store and business interruption.

→ Get Commercial Property Insurance Quotes

Sprinkler systems and insurance discounts: what you actually get

Fire is the largest single cause of warehouse losses in the UK. High racking concentrates combustible material in a way that can turn a contained fire into a structure-level event quickly, and large open floor plans slow fire service intervention because access points may be limited. A functioning automatic sprinkler system dramatically changes how a fire develops and how much damage results before it’s controlled.

Insurers price this risk differential. A warehouse with a compliant sprinkler system installed to the relevant UK standard is a materially different risk to one without, and that difference is reflected in the premium. The discount available depends on several factors, but the headline range is 15-30% on the property section for most commercial warehouse risks with BS EN 12845-compliant systems.

What makes a sprinkler system insurance-recognised

Not all sprinkler systems qualify for the same discount. Insurers require evidence of compliance with recognised standards and third-party certification schemes. The key standards and schemes for UK commercial warehouses:

BS EN 12845

The primary British and European standard for fixed firefighting systems in commercial and industrial buildings. Design, installation, and maintenance requirements for automatic sprinkler systems. Compliance is the baseline expectation for most UK warehouse insurers.

LPS 1048

The Loss Prevention Standards Board’s certification scheme for commercial automatic sprinkler installers. Operated by BRE (Building Research Establishment). LPS 1048 certification of the installing contractor is required by many UK property insurers as a condition of receiving the premium discount.

FM Global standards

Factory Mutual (FM Global) operates its own sprinkler design standards, often specified by insurers underwriting larger warehouse risks. FM-approved systems typically provide the highest level of discount because of their more demanding design criteria, particularly for high-bay and high-racking environments.

Annual maintenance records

A discount is not a permanent entitlement. Insurers require evidence that the system is maintained in working order, with annual inspection and test records. A system that’s been installed but not serviced offers little insurer confidence, and a poorly maintained system may void fire-related claims if it can be shown it wasn’t in working order.

One nuance worth understanding: racking height changes sprinkler requirements. High-bay storage above 5.5 metres requires in-rack sprinkler systems or enhanced ceiling-level systems that differ from the approach used in standard-height warehouses. If a warehouse operator extends their racking upwards without modifying the sprinkler design, the system may no longer be appropriate for the storage configuration, which can affect both the discount and the basis of a fire claim.

Always notify your insurer and your sprinkler maintenance contractor when racking configuration changes materially. The sprinkler design and the racking layout are interlinked in a way that isn’t obvious unless you’ve worked through a high-bay warehouse fire loss.

Warehouse rebuild costs and the underinsurance problem

Approximately 80% of UK SMEs are underinsured, according to Allianz. For warehouses, the gap between declared value and true reinstatement cost is typically larger than other commercial property types, for several compounding reasons.

Basic warehouse rebuild costs run from roughly £700 to £950 per square metre for a standard structure under current BCIS data. But that baseline figure doesn’t account for specialist warehouse features: high-load floor specifications for forklift traffic, dock levellers and loading bay equipment, three-phase electrical infrastructure, sprinkler systems, refrigeration plant, or mezzanine floors. A warehouse with these features can realistically cost £1,200 to £1,500 per square metre to reinstate properly, and that’s before professional fees, demolition, and debris removal, which together typically add 25 to 35% to the construction cost alone.

UK commercial rebuild costs rose by approximately 30 to 35% between 2020 and 2025, according to BCIS data, driven by materials inflation and labour shortages in the construction sector. A warehouse insured on a value set five years ago, and never reviewed, is almost certainly underinsured. Construction material prices remain around 2% higher in January 2026 than the previous year, according to Department for Business and Trade data, adding further pressure on declared values that are already behind.

How the average clause works in a warehouse claim

If a property is underinsured, the insurer applies the average clause to any claim, not just total losses. Here’s what that looks like:

True rebuild value

£2,000,000

What it actually costs to reinstate the warehouse

Declared sum insured

£1,000,000

What was declared to the insurer (50% of true value)

Claim for roof damage

£200,000 claim

Insurer pays £100,000 (50%). You fund the rest

The average clause applies to all claims, not just total losses. A routine repair claim is also subject to proportional reduction if the property is underinsured.

The practical steps for any warehouse operator: commission a formal reinstatement cost assessment (RCA) by a RICS-accredited surveyor if the building value has not been independently assessed in the last three years. Review and update the figure annually to reflect construction cost inflation using BCIS indices if a full survey isn’t being repeated every year. Notify the insurer whenever significant physical changes are made to the building, including racking extensions, mezzanines, yard surfaces, or electrical upgrades. For more on calculating commercial rebuild values correctly, see our guide to how to calculate your commercial property rebuild value.

Business interruption: indemnity period and what it needs to cover

Business interruption cover replaces lost gross profit and pays for increased costs of working following an insured event that stops trading. For a warehouse, this is arguably more important than the building cover itself: the repair bill is a defined cost, but the revenue impact of being unable to despatch for six months, losing contracts to competitors who can fulfil them, and the cost of rebuilding a customer base can be open-ended.

The indemnity period is the maximum time over which business interruption losses are paid. Most warehouse operators set this at 12 months. Most specialist brokers advise at least 18 to 24 months for a warehouse of any meaningful size. The reason: the actual process of getting a warehouse back into operation after a significant loss takes considerably longer than a year in realistic scenarios.

The realistic reinstatement timeline looks something like: structural assessment and insurer loss adjuster appointment (two to four weeks), planning and building regulations approval if structural changes are involved (six to twelve weeks), contractor procurement and programme (four to eight weeks lead time in 2026’s construction market), construction (twelve to twenty weeks for a rebuild), racking and plant procurement and installation (eight to sixteen weeks, longer if specialist items are on extended lead times), commissioning and handover. From a significant fire to operational restart, eighteen months is a plausible best case. Twenty-four months is more honest for a larger or more complex site.

Set the indemnity period at 12 months and any losses beyond that point are uninsured. The premium difference between 12 and 24 months is modest. The consequence of getting it wrong is not.

How different warehouse types affect your insurance

Warehouse is not a single risk category in underwriting terms. The type of operation, the goods stored, and the building construction all affect insurer appetite and premium. Here are the main variables underwriters look at:

📦 Distribution and e-commerce fulfilment

High throughput, constant vehicle movements at loading bays, multiple staff. Insurer focus is on security conditions, fire loading from packing materials and cardboard, and high seasonal stock fluctuations. E-commerce fulfilment centres with automated conveyor systems need engineering breakdown cover as a separate arrangement.

🧊 Cold storage and temperature-controlled

Refrigeration plant, insulated panels, and cold room construction all need specialist declared values. Refrigeration breakdown causing stock spoilage is a separate extension from property damage. Ammonia refrigeration systems require specific insurer notification and may narrow available markets. Food standard certifications affect insurability of stock claims.

⚡ High-bay automated storage

Clad-rack buildings where the racking is structural require specialist insurer assessment. The racking and the building are the same asset, which changes both the reinstatement calculation and the sprinkler design requirement entirely. These sites typically need FM Global or similar specialist underwriting and are not adequately served by standard commercial property markets.

🛒 Third-party logistics (3PL)

Operators storing goods on behalf of client businesses need warehouseman’s liability in addition to their own property cover. The standard of care owed to clients, and the contractual limitations of liability in warehouse terms and conditions, directly affect the scope of cover needed. Individual client contracts may specify insurance requirements that the standard market may not satisfy.

Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and does not constitute insurance or financial advice. Policy terms, cover, and premiums vary between insurers and depend on individual property circumstances. Always seek advice from an FCA-regulated broker and commission a professional reinstatement cost assessment before setting your sum insured. MyMoneyComparison.com Ltd is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), registration number 916241.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does warehouse insurance cost in the UK?
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Warehouse insurance premiums vary too widely for a reliable average figure. The primary drivers are the building’s reinstatement value, the type and value of stock held, the racking and plant values, fire protection provision, security measures, the operator’s claims history, and the nature of the goods stored. A small leased unit holding modest stock might be insured for a few hundred pounds a year. A large distribution centre with high-value stock, specialist plant, and significant business interruption exposure will run to tens of thousands.

  • The most reliable way to understand your position is to get a formal reinstatement cost assessment, then compare specialist commercial property quotes with that figure as the starting point

Does warehouse insurance cover flood damage?
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Flood is included in most standard warehouse commercial property policies, but the terms depend heavily on location. Sites in higher flood-risk areas, particularly industrial estates on floodplains or near watercourses, may face sublimits on flood claims, higher excesses specifically for flood events, or flood exclusions altogether on properties with a history of flooding. Insurers typically reference the Environment Agency flood risk maps and their own proprietary data when assessing warehouse sites.

  • UK property insurance claims reached an expected £6.1 billion in 2025, with weather-related claims running at double the 2017-2021 annual average. Insurers are actively pricing flood exposure more carefully in 2025 and 2026, and flood sublimits or higher excesses are becoming more common on sites with any meaningful flood risk designation

Do I need separate insurance for goods I store on behalf of clients?
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Yes. Your own commercial property policy covers your assets, including buildings, fixtures, and any stock you own. It does not cover your legal liability for damage to or loss of goods belonging to your clients. If a fire damages a client’s stock in your warehouse, you’re potentially liable as the bailee, and that liability needs a warehouseman’s liability (bailee) policy. Some warehouse policies include a “customer goods” extension, but these typically have sublimits and conditions that may not match your actual liability exposure. Check whether a standalone warehouseman’s liability policy is more appropriate for the volumes and values involved.

Are forklifts covered under warehouse insurance?
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Forklifts used within the warehouse premises are typically covered under the contents or plant and machinery section of a warehouse commercial property policy, including accidental damage to the forklift itself. However, once a forklift moves onto a public road, the same motor insurance requirements that apply to any vehicle apply, and the property policy does not extend to on-road use. Internal breakdown of the forklift’s mechanical or electrical systems may not be covered by the property policy unless engineering breakdown cover has been added.

  • High-value forklifts should be specifically scheduled and declared at current replacement value. Lump-sum contents declarations that don’t separately identify significant items of plant can result in settlement disputes at claim time

Should I insure the warehouse building if I’m a tenant, not an owner?
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Not automatically, but your lease may require you to insure it. Commercial leases vary enormously in how they allocate insurance responsibility. Some place building insurance entirely with the landlord, some with the tenant, and some split between the two. Read the lease carefully and confirm who is responsible for what. If the landlord insures the building, check whether their policy includes tenant improvements (mezzanines, racking, fit-out) or whether these fall on you. Where the landlord insures, you should still arrange contents, stock, liability, and business interruption in your own name.

  • A common error: tenants assume the landlord’s building policy covers their racking and plant. It almost never does. The landlord’s policy covers the shell; your contents are your responsibility regardless of who owns the building

Compare Commercial Property Insurance for Warehouses

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  • All warehouse types, all sectors. Specialist brokers with commercial property and industrial premises experience
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Last updated: May 2026

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Michael Harrington, Founder of MyMoneyComparison.com

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Michael Harrington
Founder & Director, MyMoneyComparison.com
Michael founded MyMoneyComparison.com in 2013 and has over a decade of experience in UK insurance and financial services. He leads editorial standards, broker partnerships, and compliance, working with FCA-authorised specialist brokers across the UK.

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