Pipe insurance costing consumers £100m in ‘unnecessary’ charges

TEN out of the 12 biggest water companies in the UK are promoting potentially unnecessary insurance that is costing consumers more than £100 million a year, according to Which?

The watchdog found that the companies were promoting “expensive” supply pipe insurance alongside their own free pipe repair schemes, which customers are automatically entitled to use.

Millions of customers will have bought insurance they do not need and will never claim on, the consumer group said.

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Which? said 667,000 homes in the Anglian, Southern and United Utilities areas are covered by third-party water pipe insurance provider Homeserve, adding: “The sheer number of people who buy this cover hints at how valuable these policies are to the providers.

“At £35 a year, customers in these three regions alone spend more than £23 million on pipe insurance. Once you add the customers from other regions, the total spend is likely to be more than £100 million.”

Researchers found nine of the 12 big companies promoted Homeserve’s policy through direct mail promotions.

While references to the water companies’ free pipe repair schemes were included in some of these letters, their benefits were played down, Which? said.

Some of the firms also promoted third-party insurance on their own headed paper, potentially persuading consumers to unnecessarily buy a policy, the watchdog added.

It said none of the letters it scrutinised mentioned that home insurance might also cover water supply disruptions, despite finding that 19 of the leading 25 home insurers including AA, Legal & General and RIAS would cover burst supply pipe claims to varying degrees.

Which? added: “Disturbingly, we were concerned to find that many water companies’ websites encourage their customers to first call a plumber in the event of leak, which in fact could invalidate a claim under their home insurance, as many insurers specify they must be contacted before any repairs are made.”

Which? executive director Richard Lloyd said: “It’s totally unacceptable that water companies are pushing potentially unnecessary water supply pipe insurance from third-party private companies. Few companies highlight their own assistance schemes, and most fail to tell you that your home buildings insurance may overlap on the key benefits of cover.

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“We’re calling on all water companies to use the same free pipe repair scheme so that it’s clear to consumers what they’re covered for.

“We also want to see the Government and Ofwat take action to stop water companies from confusing consumers by promoting third-party pipe insurance under their own banner.”