Insurance
Insurance is not only important for
your own financial protection, but various types of
insurance are legal requirements. Failure to be properly
ensured leaves you liable to fines and (in theory) even
imprisonment. Consequently you should ensure that you
have taken care of essentials:
-
Automobile. If you are
driving a car in France, you must be insured. This
is no different than any other major country. The
legal requirements are that you are insured to cover
injury to people or damage to property. Whether you
take out additional insurances (e.g. for damage to
your car, breakdown assistance, towing back to your
country of origin) is optional. In some cases you
will be covered by your existing insurance (e.g.
many UK insurers now automatically provide cover for
short trips abroad) but it is wise to confirm your
status before visiting or moving to France.
-
House. If you are own a
house in France, you are legally required to have
insurance for injury to people that come onto your
property. This is for events such as a tile falling
off your roof and hitting a visitor or their car. In
addition to this, you will probably want to take out
normal house and contents insurance.
There are of course many good French
insurance companies. However, if you are not fluent in
French, you may wish to take out insurance from one of
the many British insurance companies that specialize in
providing insurance policies for France in English. As
the following indicates, if you are not able to
carefully read and understand your policy, you are at
risk.
Insurance policies always have a
fair number of conditions attached to them. It is not
uncommon to find that you are in breach of one or more
of the standard conditions, in which case if you try to
claim on the insurance policy you may find that the
insurance company refuses to pay or will only give
partial payment. To avoid this you need to carefully
read the conditions and if you do not meet all of them,
have the conditions changed accordingly (this is
generally not difficult). As an example, many insurance
policies have as a standard condition that you must have
a nearby neighbor (e.g. within 50 meters). The reason
behind this is that if you do not have nearby neighbors,
you are at greater risk as it is less likely that
someone will be watching your property when you are
away. If you do not meet this condition, simply bring
this to the attention of your insurer and have him
modify the policy (you may have to pay a slightly higher
insurance premium as a result). If you fail to do this,
then you may find you are uninsured or only partly
insured. Consequently, if your French is not
sufficiently fluent to be able to carefully read all the
conditions, you should consider either paying a
professional translator to translate (which is not
cheap) or simply taking out an insurance policy in
English from one of the specialist insurers.
Another standard condition to be
aware of is occupancy. Many policies state a maximum
period that the property can be unoccupied; if you
exceed this period (which is typically the case with
holiday homes) then you must ensure that your policy
does not have this limitation.
If you have a swimming pool or a
pond on your property, then you may require special
insurance for this as well. Check with your insurer.
Also, other other features which increase the risk to
your property or visitors to your property.