Getting a claim approved usually comes down to the strength of your evidence pack. Far too many submissions fail because documents are incomplete, photos are unclear or records lack necessary context. How can you gather the right paperwork, take convincing photos and organise everything so a reviewer can verify your case quickly?
If you need to make a claim, this guide shows you how to check what your claim covers and what you are entitled to, gather the essential documents and records, take clear photos and videos, and organise everything into an indexed, chronological file. Follow these practical steps to create a claim-ready evidence pack that speeds up review, reduces the chance of disputes, and gives you a record you can rely on.

How to check what your claim covers and your rights
Start by locating the exact clause numbers and the definitions for covered perils, insured property and limits in the policy. Compare the incident description line by line against those clauses to spot matches or conflicts, and keep verbatim copies or screenshots of the relevant pages as evidence.
Check the declarations page to confirm who holds an insurable interest and where it applies. Gather supporting ownership documents to prove legal interest, such as title deeds, lease agreements or sales invoices. Note any mortgagee or loss payee entries and collect related correspondence to show competing interests.
Keep everything organised so each document can be directly linked to the clause or entry it supports. It might feel a bit fiddly, but this level of detail makes resolving a claim much simpler.
This can feel overwhelming, so break it down into clear steps you can follow.
1. Work out the policy limits and how they apply. Locate the headline limit, any itemised sub-limits, aggregate caps and the excess clause, and calculate how each will restrict the amount you can recover compared with your estimated loss.
2. Check the policy conditions. Review exclusions, warranties, maintenance obligations and disclosure requirements so you know what could affect a claim.
3. Gather contemporaneous evidence of compliance. Assemble inspection reports, service logs, maintenance invoices and photographs to show you met your obligations and to counter any denial based on non-compliance.
4. Clarify third party and repair consent issues. Determine whether any third party has rights to proceeds, whether assignment or insurer consent is needed for repairs, and how named contacts and endorsements might affect recovery.
5. Record prior history and contribution risks. Note endorsements, named contacts and prior claims history to identify potential subrogation or contribution exposures.
If anything is unclear, treat these steps as a checklist to share with your insurer or adviser so you can get a clear view of recoverable amounts and the evidence you need to support them.

Gather essential documents and records to make admin easier
Gather your core legal and ownership documents and make digital copies. Scan policy schedules, title deeds, purchase contracts and warranty certificates, then store the original papers somewhere safe and separate so anyone who needs to verify ownership can access them. Link each item to its purchase history by keeping receipts, invoices, bank or card statements and order confirmations together, labelling files with the transaction reference and the seller’s contact details. Photograph or scan serial numbers, maintenance logs, product manuals and identification documents, and add a short note to each file explaining why it matters for quick retrieval.
If you need to put together a claim pack, keep it straightforward and easy to check. Gather independent and official reports such as repair estimates, professional valuations, specialist opinions and any police or incident reports. For every document, record the author, organisation and contact details so the information can be corroborated.
Preserve all communications by exporting emails and message threads, keeping clear call notes and obtaining signed witness statements where possible so metadata and context remain intact.
Create a concise index that flags key exchanges and links documents to specific items with reference numbers and brief annotated notes.
Arrange the pack so a claim handler can verify cover, ownership and the sequence of events without having to chase for missing details.

How to capture clear, usable photo and video evidence
When photographing an item for records, frame each shot to show the whole scene, one specific detail and a mid-range view that links them. Include a common object or a ruler for scale, and take shots from several angles to reveal depth and any hidden damage. Take close-up photos of identifying features such as serial numbers, labels, number plates and any paperwork. Use your camera’s focus and macro modes so text and fine detail remain clear and legible.
If you need to make a visual record for a claim, record one continuous video walkthrough and talk through what you are showing. Start from the wider context and pan slowly into the details, pausing to zoom in on any points of interest. It may feel a bit awkward, but a steady, narrated clip makes things much clearer.
Keep the original file untouched and export a copy to include with your claim. Keep a simple log with clear filenames that note where each clip was taken, what it shows and the order of shots so nothing gets ambiguous when you put the pack together.
Avoid heavy editing; only make minimal exposure or crop adjustments if absolutely necessary. If your device can include metadata or location data, enabling that can help verify authenticity, but be mindful of privacy when sharing such information.
Capture and preserve clear photo and video evidence
- Prepare kit and camera settings: choose wide, mid-range, and close-up modes or focal lengths, enable macro for serial numbers, stabilise with a tripod or steady surface, keep ISO as low as practical and use an aperture that maintains sharpness, lock focus for close shots, and use flash or a reflector only to fill shadows while avoiding glare.
- Follow a repeatable shot sequence and narration: open with a wide establishing image that includes a common object or ruler for scale, take a mid-range shot to link context and detail, finish with multiple close-up angles of serial numbers, labels, registration plates, and damage orientation, and record a continuous video walkthrough that names each item, pans slowly from context to detail, and pauses to zoom on points of interest.
- Keep originals intact and log everything: save unedited original files, export copies for sharing, and use a clear filename convention that records location, subject, and shot order. Maintain a simple written log that lists filenames, a brief description of each file, and who handled the files to support traceability.
- Protect authenticity and privacy: preserve device metadata or geolocation when it helps authenticity, consider checksum or timestamp tools for critical cases, avoid heavy editing beyond minor exposure or crop adjustments, and redact or strip sensitive metadata from shared copies when privacy requires it.

How to organise your indexed chronological evidence file
If you need to prepare documents and photos for review, keep things simple and consistent so a reviewer can find any item in no more than three steps. Try this straightforward system:
1. Start with an indexed cover sheet. Give each document or photo a unique ID, a one-line description and a sequential number. Also include the filename and where the file is stored so anyone can locate the item quickly.
2. Standardise file names and folder structure. Prefix each file name with its sequence number, use clear descriptors and add a file type marker. Keep originals untouched in a dedicated Originals folder and put working copies in a separate folder to avoid accidental changes.
3. Record provenance on a chain of custody sheet. Log who collected or handled each item, note transfers and storage locations, and keep any related correspondence with the record.
4. Use digital checksums or hashes for files. These help detect alterations and preserve integrity during review.
Keeping this system consistent makes reviews quicker and gives you confidence that files are complete and unchanged.
When you need to document items or incidents, a simple, consistent routine makes later review much quicker and less stressful. For each subject, take a wide contextual shot, a mid shot, and close-ups that include a neutral object for scale. Keep the original files untouched and also save an annotated copy that records viewpoint, orientation and what the image is showing.
Build a cross-referenced inventory using unique IDs to link documents, photos and statements, and add a short narrative that explains how the pieces fit together. Put thumbnail images on the index to speed visual review. Finally, flag priority items for the assessor and add brief captions saying why each item matters, so evidence can be checked quickly, consistently and transparently.

How to submit an evidence pack and monitor responses
Begin with a one-page cover sheet and a consolidated index that lists claimant details, the claim reference and a short executive summary linking each piece of evidence to the relevant allegation or loss. Convert documents to widely accepted formats, keep original copies untouched, and use consistent file names that clearly show the document type and sequence. Keep a change log of any edits so reviewers can trust the chain of custody. For photographs, keep a photo log that records the file name, a brief description, the location and any retained device metadata to support authenticity.
To create a clear, auditable submission trail, keep everything organised and easy to find. Try this simple approach:
– Save upload confirmation pages and any confirmation emails.
– Capture screenshots of the submission screen that clearly show file names and timestamps.
– Keep postal or courier tracking receipts and add them to your evidence pack.
Store these documents together and maintain a straightforward case management table that records each item submitted, the recipient, reference number, method of delivery, current status, required actions, and who is responsible for follow up.
Ask the recipient for an explicit acknowledgement of receipt and a list of any missing items or next steps so everyone knows what to expect. If responses stall, send polite, factual follow up messages, copy a named senior contact for escalation, and attach the index and submission receipts to every message to keep the record coherent.
Keeping a tidy, consistent trail makes follow up much simpler and gives you better control if you need to check what was sent and when.
Linking clear references to ownership documents, independent reports and a simple photo and video log creates a verifiable narrative assessors can follow without having to chase extra details. Keep original files safe, record a clear chain of custody and add file checksums so reviewers can confirm nothing has been altered. Together, these steps preserve integrity, speed up review and reduce follow-up queries.
Treat the headings as a simple checklist: confirm the scope and any rights, gather all relevant documents, take clear photos or short videos as visual evidence, organise the items in chronological order, and log any responses. Following these steps will reduce disputes, speed up assessments and leave you with a defensible record you can rely on.
