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Latent defects insurance meaning

What does Latent defects insurance mean?
Insurance taken out (often at or before practical completion) to cover the cost of remedying physical damage to a building arising from latent or inherent defects in design, materials or workmanship that were not discoverable at completion and become apparent during the policy term. In the UK and Ireland this is a market term, not generally defined by statute or case law. Key features include first‑party cover (the insured need not prove negligence or pursue the project team), a single up‑front premium, and a policy period typically of 10–12 years from practical completion. Policies commonly cover structural elements and the building envelope and may include resultant damage; known defects, wear and tear and inadequate maintenance are usually excluded. Cover is often required by developers, funders and purchasers on new builds and major refurbishments and is usually assignable to successors in title and tenants. Also called inherent defects insurance (IDI) and, loosely, decennial insurance. “Decennial” in this context refers to the c.10‑year structural cover available in the UK and Ireland and should not be confused with civil‑law decennial liability. Residential “structural warranties” are a form of latent defects insurance. Insurers typically require technical audits during construction as part of underwriting.
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View the related Checklists about Latent defects insurance

CHECKLISTS
Scottish commercial leases: practical checklist for negotiating repair and dilapidations provisions (FRI, latent defects, schedules of condition, common parts, insurance/rei interitus, consents, inspection rights and enforcement)

Repair under the common law Under the common law, a landlord, relative to a tenant, bears notably heavy duties regarding upkeep and repair of the leased premises, see Practice Note: Repair clauses in commercial leases in Scotland—Repair under the common law. Within commercial leasing, landlords will almost invariably aim to exclude all such common law repairing liabilities for the demised premises, though not for common areas in multi-let buildings; see Practice Note: Service charge and outgoing provisions in commercial leases in Scotland. Consequently, tenants usually shoulder substantial repair commitments. The prevalent model is the full repairing and insuring (FRI) lease, under which the tenant assumes responsibility for repairs of every kind save for damage arising from insured risks; see Practice Note: Repair clauses in commercial leases in Scotland—Contracting out of the common law—the full repairing and insuring (FRI) Lease and The modern commercial lease: Stair Memorial Encyclopaedia [466]...

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CHECKLISTS
Construction due diligence in property acquisitions: initial document review checklist (documents, parties, scope, PI, latent defects, warranties/third party rights/assignment, guarantees, reports, Building Safety Act higher-risk buildings)

Scrutiny of construction documentation is typically pertinent to assets constructed within 12 years of the purchase date, or, for older properties, where works have been undertaken in the preceding 12-year period; however, treat this timeframe as a practical minimum only, since extended limitation periods for certain building safety-related claims may warrant a broader review for property that is, or includes, residential accommodation. See Practice Note: The construction due diligence process. This Checklist sets out the principal points that must be considered following receipt of the construction documents in relation to the property concerned. The papers should be reviewed at the outset and these key issues evaluated before putting any pre-contract enquiries to the seller. For an example of a list of pre-contract enquiries, see: Construction pre-contract enquiries-checklist. Documents (1) Confirm that a complete suite of construction documents relating to the property's construction and/or to works completed in the last 12 years, or any longer period as appropriate, has been provided and properly...

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CHECKLISTS
Construction dispute settlements in England and Wales: a practitioner checklist for negotiation, drafting and enforcement

Any resolution of a dispute should be set out in a signed, enforceable written agreement that precisely records the parties’ terms. This reduces the prospect of later misunderstanding and allows a party to commence proceedings if the other side does not comply. As the agreement is a contract, contract law governs its drafting and interpretation, so it must be written with clarity. This Checklist highlights the key considerations of particular importance to construction disputes. For illustrative clauses and deeper analysis (including drafting notes), see Precedent: Settlement agreement for construction dispute (long form). Ensure that settlement negotiations are conducted on a without prejudice basis State expressly that settlement discussions are conducted on a ‘without prejudice’ basis so that, if talks fail, any proposed concessions cannot be relied upon by the other party in subsequent legal proceedings. Do not assume that terms such as ‘confidential’ or ‘off the record’ offer comparable protection. For further detail, see Practice Note: Without prejudice communications. Who is entering into the settlement?...

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View the related Practice Notes about Latent defects insurance

PRACTICE NOTES
Managing Employer Risks under FIDIC Red, Yellow and Silver Books (1999/2017): key clauses, liability caps, change in law, delay, unforeseen conditions, force majeure, and drafting/negotiation guidance

Introduction to risk under the FIDIC Red, Yellow and Silver Books The bigger and more intricate a construction scheme becomes, the higher the risks borne by both sides and the greater the chance that delivery slips on cost, schedule or the required quality or performance thresholds. FIDIC contracts are widely viewed as balanced, equitable standard forms for building works and aim to allocate in advance the risks that arise on such undertakings. The guiding principle of these forms is that each risk should sit with the party best able to control or manage it. Concerns were raised about certain risk concepts and definitions in the 1999 editions, which FIDIC attempted to remedy in the 2017 updates; nevertheless, the overall shift in risk sharing was not particularly marked. FIDIC’s general position endures: the party most suitably placed to handle a given risk should bear it. The chosen FIDIC book influences the baseline allocation of risk: the Red Book (construction contract) places a substantial...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Limitation in construction: contract and tort claims, latent defects, contractual backstops and standstills, s 32 concealment, adjudication, contribution, DPA 1972 and Building Safety Act 2022 (England and Wales)

Limitation Act 1980 and Latent Damage Act 1986 The Limitation Act 1980 (LA 1980), as amended by the Latent Damage Act 1986 (LDA 1986), sets the time limits for starting different categories of legal action. If proceedings are issued after the relevant period has run, a defendant can contend that the claimant’s remedy is time-barred. For the construction sector, the most pertinent deadlines concern contractual and tortious (negligence) claims, though the LA 1980 also fixes periods for personal injury, defective products and defamation. There are, moreover, particular limitation rules for claims under specific statutes, including the Defective Premises Act 1972, the Building Act 1984 and the Building Safety Act 2022. Limitation is often critical for disputes about defective work, as the cause of action may arise long before any issue is visible. For example, faulty foundations installed by a contractor might later cause wall cracking and subsidence, yet the problem may not manifest for years. In such circumstances, the limitation period may have lapsed before the defect becomes apparent...

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PRACTICE NOTES
‘Damage’ versus ‘loss’ in insurance: judicial guidance and practical issues for property, business interruption and liability policies (contamination, data, latent defects, inherent vice, COVID‑19)

The concept of ‘damage’ in the insurance context ‘Damage’ is pivotal in defining the extent of cover offered across many forms of insurance. Typical policy classes where recovery depends on establishing property damage include: marine cargo insurance construction all risks (CAR) cover household and commercial property insurance business interruption insurance, particularly when paired with a traditional property policy sue and labour or investigation expense cover under certain property policies liability policies responding to the insured’s legal liability for physical damage to a third party’s property The exact sense of ‘damage’ can shift, and it is always shaped by the context in which the word appears. There is no all‑purpose definition that applies in every case; as ever, the term must be construed by reference to the specific insurance policy in which it features. A policy may or may not set out a bespoke definition, or, failing that, offer other contextual indicators of how ‘damage’ should be understood....

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Q&As
NHBC warranty: who covers communal parts defects after year 2?

We have taken it that, because communal areas are mentioned, the property in question is a block of flats. For the first two years after completion of the initial sale of a new-build property, defects cover is supplied, under National House Building Council (NHBC) Buildmark, by the builder, who is responsible for putting right any faults that arise in the property and that then fall within the scope of the policy...

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