The Great Fire of London and Property Insurance
To mark the anniversary of the Great Fire of London, this weekend 350 years on, thousands looked back on the event that destroyed more than 13,000 homes and 87 churches.
The Great Fire of London blazed for 4 days. Thousands of timber buildings, crowded together, one after another caught fire.
The fire started in a bakery on Pudding Lane. The trade body said that at the time, fixing St Paul’s cost £700,000. This would equal around £600m in today’s money.
The damage caused by the Great Fire of London would lead to an insurance pay out of approximately £37bn by today’s standards as estimated by the Association of British Insurers (ABI).
To determine rebuilding costs, the ABI first set out an average number of floors and building types, metres squared per floor and a relationship between rent and building costs per metre squared. This came to around £34bn. The organisation then added costs of the City’s skyscrapers that were adjusted to today’s prices. This totalled just over £3bn.
A lot of important learning came out of the Great fire of London. New regulations about building construction came into being; fire-fighting teams were established for the first time ever – the pre-cursors to today’s London Fire Brigade; and the property insurance industry was born.
A company known as The Insurance Office was established the following year. This mutual fund took a premium from policy holders which was invested in property and the assets were used to pay claims.
Property insurance is a vital safeguard for millions of homes and businesses today, helping people back on their feet when the worst happens. But, as the Great Fire of London taught us, it’s equally important to prevent disaster whenever possible. It will never be possible to completely eliminate fire, but sprinkler technology for example can drastically reduces the chances of it taking hold and spreading.
Aviva insurance has revealed some of its most quirky fire claims over the last three centuries. Click here
to read them!



