Subject:
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Re: valuing lego for insurance purposes
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Newsgroups:
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lugnet.loc.au
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Date:
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Thu, 6 Jan 2005 22:57:33 GMT
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Viewed:
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1896 times
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In lugnet.general, Jonathan Wilson wrote:
> How should I come up with a value for my collection that reflects its true
> value and (more to the point) that the insurance company will accept.
Easy: Ring your current insurance company and ask what they will accept.
(A good point to start at will be a list of purchases and how much you paid.
Receipts would be good too. Keep in mind that Lego might not be a particularly
risky collectible...).
Cheers
Richie Dulin
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Message has 2 Replies: | | Re: valuing lego for insurance purposes
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| Frances in Tassie has her Lego insured as a separate collection. Better to do it this way rather than through the general household insurance. I believe (though I'm happy to be corrected) that she used Bricklink prices as evidence of the value of (...) (20 years ago, 7-Jan-05, to lugnet.loc.au)
| | | Re: valuing lego for insurance purposes
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| (...) The insurance company wants a list. I have no clue what all this stuff is worth. Or how much I paid for the various items in my collection. Any ideas on how to come up with a value that the insurance will accept? (20 years ago, 19-Jan-05, to lugnet.loc.au)
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Message is in Reply To:
| | valuing lego for insurance purposes
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| I have a large collection of lego including sets purchased new, sets purchased second hand and parts (some from sets I have bought and kept only some parts from but most from second hand sources). The parts are in various levels of quality (some are (...) (20 years ago, 6-Jan-05, to lugnet.general, lugnet.loc.au)
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