Welcome to the forum. Although you can post in any forum, the USA forum is here in case of local regs or laws

Insurance and water leak

View the thread, titled "Insurance and water leak" which is posted in Bathroom Advice on UK Plumbers Forums.

N

neilp123

Hi there,

Sorry this isn't exactly a plumbing question, but I need some advice!

Last week, after I took a shower upstairs, I noticed some water coming through the ceiling in the kitchen (which is directly beneath the shower). I carried out a few tests, and deduced that it was not coming from the pipes, but a leak in the shower somewhere.

I called out a plumber who quickly identified that there was a leak in the sealant where the wall panel had not been fixed properly. I did not originally consider insurance, but asked the plumber to remove the shower to see if any further damage had been caused by the leak. Once he did remove the shower, there was a fair bit of damage to the floor boards, but fortunately the main joist was pretty much in tact. The shower tray had been glued to the floor with expandable foam, so the plumber had to work damn hard to get it up, and when he did he heard a crack. No apparent damage, but a crack was heard! In order to fully investigate the water leak, he also had to remove several wall panels. He was able to remove two of them in tact, but one of them had to be sawn in half to remove.

So when we asked about costs to get sorted, it quickly became apparent that we were talking 4 figures, and it would be worth a call to insurers. We're with Nationwide. Policy states that were covered for damage caused by water leak, and the guy on the phone also said we were covered for the work needed to find the leak (trace and access I presume).

Now my question is, are we going to be covered for any damage that was done in finding the leak? So the wall panel that was cut in half, and the potentially cracked shower tray?

Someone coming out next Friday to assess. Would love some advice!

Thanks in advance.
 
the only person that would know that is

1 you the person who pays your insurance as you will have to read through your documents

2 the assessor who comes out to check water damage
 
Simple answer NO!, insurance Co will pay for any damage caused, but not for what caused the damage ! should have called insurance Co first B4 you started to remove anything.
 

Official Sponsors of Plumbers Talk

Reply to the thread, titled "Insurance and water leak" which is posted in Bathroom Advice on Plumbers Forums.

We recommend City Plumbing Supplies, BES, and Plumbing Superstore for all plumbing supplies.

Thread statistics

Created
neilp123,
Last reply from
jtsplumbing,
Replies
2
Views
708
Back
Top