Your village hall can be fully insured and you can still be personally exposed. That is the uncomfortable truth we unpack with Helen Hall from Allied Westminster, as we go beyond buildings and contents into the parts of village hall insurance that really affect the volunteers making decisions every week.
We talk trustee and management liability in plain English: what it is, who it can protect, what sorts of governance or financial allegations can trigger it, and why internal committee disputes are not automatically “an insurance thing” but can become one. If you are newly joining a committee, we share the practical checks that reduce stress later, from reading the constitution and recent minutes to understanding your insurance arrangements, risk documents, and basic finances. We also cover the limits of protection, because policy terms, conditions, and exclusions matter, especially where dishonesty or deliberate acts are involved.
From there, we tackle the real world grey areas village halls face every day: when a volunteer starts to look like an employee, how employers’ liability can be triggered, and how to document volunteer roles without drowning in paperwork. We compare personal accident cover with liability claims, then move into events insurance, risk assessments for busy mixed indoor and outdoor events, and the tricky add ons like licensed alcohol and bouncy castles. We also touch on legal expenses cover, cash and transit, terrorism insurance, and the big renewal risk many committees miss: gradual changes in how the hall is used that should be declared as they happen.
If you want clearer governance, safer events, and fewer nasty surprises when a claim lands, press play, then subscribe, share with your committee, and leave us a review so more halls can find the guidance.




