Who Needs Collections Insurance?
You may wish to consider reviewing your home insurance arrangements if:
- You own any individual item worth more than your current policy’s single-item limit (typically £1,000–£2,000)
- Your total valuables exceed £10,000–£15,000 in combined value
- You own items in more than one category (for example, jewellery and classic cars, or artwork and memorabilia)
- You regularly wear or travel with valuable items
- You own items that have appreciated significantly since you last reviewed your policy
- You attend shows, exhibitions or events with your collection
- You lend items to others or display them publicly
- Your items are vintage, rare or one-of-a-kind and could not simply be replaced from a high street shop
In our 2026 survey, 21.9% of respondents owned high-value items in two or more categories, jewellery, watches, classic cars, artwork, antiques, memorabilia and hi-fi equipment. Many of these multi-category collectors hold a standard home insurance policy that was never designed to carry that kind of weight.
The practical case for getting your home insurance properly structured around your collections starts well before the very high-value thresholds people often assume. If you have a watch worth £3,000 and your policy’s single-item limit is £1,500, you are already underinsured regardless of the total value of everything else you own.
What Types of Collections and Items Can Be Covered Within Your Home Insurance?
A properly structured home insurance policy can accommodate almost any category of high-value item as individually named and specified cover.
Jewellery and Watches
Jewellery is the most commonly owned high-value category as 26% of Norton survey respondents own jewellery or watches, and ownership is twice as common among higher-income households. This includes:
- Engagement and wedding rings
- Inherited and heirloom pieces
- Luxury watches (Rolex, Omega, Patek Philippe and other prestigious brands)
- Necklaces, bracelets, earrings and other pieces
- Watch collections
Aviva reported a 43% increase in claims for high-end jewellery theft across 2022 and 2023, driven by muggings for expensive watches, opportunist theft from cars, and targeted burglaries during holidays. The value of stolen luxury watches in the UK reached £1.5 billion, and the number of stolen or lost watches reported on The Watch Register tripled in one year, surpassing 100,000 incidents.
Jewellery is also the most commonly stolen item in UK burglaries. According to our internal research and analysis of domestic burglary data from police forces across the UK, jewellery remained the most frequently stolen category, followed closely by electronics and personal accessories.
For a full breakdown of how to properly specify jewellery and watches within your home insurance — what needs listing, how often valuations should be updated, and what worldwide cover looks like — see our dedicated guides to jewellery insurance UK and watch insurance UK.
Classic Cars and Vintage Vehicles
Classic car ownership and collectibles ownership overlap significantly. In our 2026 survey, 84.7% of respondents who own classic or vintage collectible items also own a hobby, classic, sports or imported vehicle. These owners often need their vehicles and their other valuables coordinated within one well-structured arrangement or reviewed together by the same adviser.
Classic car insurance differs from standard motor insurance in one important respect: specialist classic vehicle policies can provide valuation approaches that may better reflect the vehicle’s agreed or current market value, subject to insurer terms. For this reason, getting an accurate, current valuation, and making sure that figure is reflected in your cover is especially important for classic vehicles, just as it is for other high-value collectibles within your home insurance.
Artwork and Antiques
9.8% of survey respondents own artwork or antiques, rising to 40% among those with £75,000+ in combined valuables. This includes:
- Oil paintings and original prints
- Sculptures (including bespoke or unique pieces)
- Antique furniture
- First edition or rare books
- Antique jewellery
- Antique rugs and carpets
It is not uncommon for a customer to discover, at the point of a claim, that a sculpture or painting is insured at what they paid for it fifteen or twenty years ago — not what it would cost to replace today. In cases like this, being underinsured by double or more is entirely possible, particularly for artists or makers whose work has appreciated over time. This is one of the most common — and costly — oversights in personal insurance, and one that a straightforward policy review would have prevented.
For guidance on getting paintings, sculptures and fine art properly specified within your home insurance, see our art insurance UK guide. For furniture, silverware and inherited antique pieces, our antique insurance guide covers the specific considerations for heritage items.
Memorabilia and Collectibles
11.7% of respondents own memorabilia or collectibles, including:
- Sports memorabilia (signed shirts, match programmes, match balls)
- Vinyl record collections — a rising category as rare first pressings reach four and five-figure values
- Military medals and insignia
- Model railways, die-cast vehicles and scale models built by hand
- Stamps, coins and banknotes
These collections present a particular challenge for standard insurance because their value is often not obvious from appearance and can appreciate sharply based on market trends, condition and provenance. Properly listing and valuing these items within your home insurance removes the ambiguity that makes claims difficult.
High-End Audio and Hi-Fi Equipment
7.5% of respondents own high-end audio or hi-fi equipment. Audiophile systems comprising valve amplifiers, reference turntables, high-end cartridges and speaker systems can easily reach values of £5,000 to £50,000+. Standard contents policies rarely have the item limits to accommodate these properly, and home cinema systems face the same gap — projectors, screens, processing equipment and premium speaker arrays are routinely underinsured on off-the-shelf policies.
Our hi-fi system and home cinema insurance guide explains how to ensure your system is covered for its true replacement value within your home insurance, including cover for accidental damage during setup or system changes.
Other High-Value Items
A properly structured home insurance policy can also accommodate:
- Vintage and rare musical instruments
- Wine and spirits collections
- Camera systems and professional photographic equipment
- Golf club sets and premium sporting equipment
- Designer handbags and rare clothing
In each case, the approach is the same: ensure items are individually listed on your home insurance schedule, accurately valued and covered for their current replacement value.