Standard homeowners insurance will not pay a claim on a property you’re renting to tenants. If a tenant is injured, a fire destroys the building, or you lose months of rent after a covered loss — you need landlord insurance.
Why Homeowners Insurance Is Not Enough
Homeowners insurance covers an owner-occupied primary residence. The moment you rent the property — even for a few weeks — insurers treat it differently:
- Risk profile changes: Tenants are statistically associated with more liability claims than owners
- Personal property exclusion: Your personal belongings stored at a rented property may not be covered
- Rental income isn’t covered: HO policies don’t replace lost rent
Most homeowners policies contain a clause that voids coverage if the property is rented for more than 30–60 days per year without notifying the insurer. A denied claim on a $250,000 fire loss is the worst way to discover this.
What Landlord Insurance Covers
Dwelling Coverage (Coverage A)
Pays to repair or rebuild the physical structure after a covered loss. Covered perils typically include:
| Covered | Usually NOT Covered |
|---|---|
| Fire and smoke | Flood (requires separate NFIP or private policy) |
| Wind and hail | Earthquake (requires endorsement or separate policy) |
| Lightning | Normal wear and tear |
| Vandalism | Tenant damage beyond security deposit |
| Vehicle impact | Mold (unless from a covered loss) |
| Weight of snow/ice | Sewer backup (can add endorsement) |
Replacement cost vs. actual cash value (ACV): Replacement cost coverage pays to rebuild with new materials. ACV coverage deducts depreciation — a 20-year-old roof gets partial payment. Pay for replacement cost; the premium difference is small.
Liability Coverage
If a tenant, guest, or delivery person is injured on your property and sues you, liability coverage pays:
- Legal defense fees
- Court judgments or settlements
- Medical bills (often under a “medical payments” sub-limit)
Standard limits: $100,000–$500,000. Recommended minimum: $300,000 per property. For multiple properties or higher net worth, pair with an umbrella policy ($1M–$5M of additional coverage for ~$300–$500/year).
Loss of Rental Income (Fair Rental Value)
If a covered event (fire, major storm) makes the property uninhabitable, this coverage replaces the rent you lose during repairs — typically up to 12–24 months or a specified dollar limit.
Example: A kitchen fire causes $45,000 in repairs. The property is vacant for 4 months. Loss of rental income coverage pays: 4 × $1,800 rent = $7,200, in addition to the repair costs.
Optional Add-Ons to Consider
| Endorsement | What It Adds | Annual Cost Estimate |
|---|---|---|
| Flood insurance | Covers flood damage | $700–$2,000+ (NFIP); varies by flood zone |
| Sewer/drain backup | Sewer backup into property | $50–$150 |
| Earthquake | Seismic damage | $300–$1,500 (CA); less in low-risk states |
| Rent guarantee | Covers unpaid rent (some insurers) | $30–$100/month |
| Equipment breakdown | HVAC, appliances | $50–$150 |
| Umbrella liability | $1M–$5M above liability limits | $150–$500/year |
What Landlord Insurance Does NOT Cover
| Not Covered | What to Do Instead |
|---|---|
| Tenant personal belongings | Require tenants to carry renters insurance |
| Your personal property stored at the rental | Schedule items under the landlord policy |
| Intentional damage by tenants | Security deposit + small claims court |
| Vacancy beyond 30–60 days | Notify insurer; get vacant property coverage |
| Short-term rentals (Airbnb/VRBO) | Airbnb AirCover + STR-specific policy |
| Flood | NFIP or private flood policy |
| Mold from lack of maintenance | Routine maintenance prevents this |
How Much Does Landlord Insurance Cost?
Average Annual Premiums by Dwelling Value
| Dwelling Value | National Average | High-Risk State (FL, LA, TX) |
|---|---|---|
| $150,000 | $900–$1,400 | $1,800–$3,500 |
| $250,000 | $1,200–$2,000 | $2,500–$5,000 |
| $350,000 | $1,600–$2,600 | $3,500–$7,000 |
| $500,000 | $2,200–$3,500 | $5,000–$10,000+ |
Multi-unit properties (duplex, triplex, quadplex) cost more — premiums scale with dwelling value and number of units.
Factors That Affect Your Premium
| Factor | Effect on Premium |
|---|---|
| Property age | Older homes: higher premiums |
| Roof age and material | Aging roof: higher; impact-resistant: discount |
| Location flood zone | Flood zone: significantly higher |
| Claims history | Prior claims: 20–40% surcharge |
| Deductible level | Higher deductible: lower premium |
| Coverage limits | Higher liability limit: modest premium increase |
| Pool or trampoline | Higher liability premium |
| Vacancy periods | Surcharge or policy gap if vacant >60 days |
Short-Term Rental Insurance
Standard landlord insurance is written for long-term tenants (6-month+ leases). It generally does not cover:
- Damages from guests staying 1–30 nights
- Higher turnover liability exposure
- Theft by guests
For Airbnb and VRBO hosts:
- Airbnb AirCover provides $3M host liability and $3M host damage protection — but it’s not insurance
- Get a dedicated short-term rental (STR) insurance policy from providers like Proper Insurance, CBIZ, or CBIZ Vacation Rental Insurance
- Some standard landlord insurers now offer STR endorsements — confirm with your insurer
Landlord Insurance for LLCs
Many investors hold rental properties in an LLC for liability protection. You can still purchase landlord insurance under the LLC name — in fact, it’s recommended to match the insured party to the property owner on record.
Note: An LLC does not replace insurance. The liability protection of an LLC can be pierced by a court if a lawsuit involves personal negligence. Insurance is the first line of defense; the LLC structure provides additional protection.
How to Buy Landlord Insurance
- Contact your current home/auto insurer first — bundling can reduce costs 5–15%
- Get quotes from 3 insurers — rates vary significantly by carrier
- Verify the coverage type — confirm it’s a landlord/dwelling fire policy, not a homeowners policy
- Set replacement cost coverage — not ACV
- Set liability at $300,000+ — consider umbrella for additional coverage
- Add sewer backup and equipment breakdown — low-cost endorsements with high ROI when needed
- Require tenant renters insurance — list yourself as interested party
Landlord insurance is different from standard homeowners insurance — for the comparison, see renters vs. homeowners insurance. For the flood insurance add-on that landlords in flood zones need, see flood insurance cost. For the homeowners insurance hub, see home insurance hub.
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