The lawsuit arrived 14 months after my tenant fell down the stairs. She was claiming $180,000 in damages for a back injury she said she sustained in my rental property. My landlord liability policy had a $100,000 limit. The差額 was coming out of my personal assets.
That was when I discovered the first of many gaps in my landlord insurance coverage.
Most new landlords assume their standard landlord insurance policy covers everything. It does not. A basic landlord policy typically includes:
Dwelling coverage: Pays to repair or rebuild your rental property if it is damaged by covered perils (fire, wind, hail, vandalism).
Liability protection: Covers legal fees and settlements if someone is injured on your property and sues you.
Loss of rental income: Pays your mortgage and other property expenses if your rental becomes uninhabitable due to a covered loss.
Medical payments: Pays small medical claims if a guest is injured, regardless of fault (usually up to $1,000-$5,000).
Sounds comprehensive? The gaps will surprise you.
Standard landlord policies do NOT cover damage caused by your tenants. If a tenant deliberately sets a fire, if they flood your building by leaving a faucet running, if they destroy your appliances during a domestic dispute — your standard policy will not pay to repair any of it.
You need a separate rider or endorsement for this, called tenant damage coverage. It costs an additional $150-$400 per year but can save you tens of thousands if you have destructive tenants.
My friend James learned this the expensive way. His tenant, facing eviction, deliberately punched holes in all the walls, broke every window, and poured concrete down all the drains. Total damage: $34,000. His insurance company denied the claim because the damage was caused by the tenant, not by a covered peril. He paid every dollar out of pocket.
Here is what the insurance agent never told you: the average landlord liability lawsuit costs $150,000 to $300,000 to resolve. Your $100,000 or even $300,000 policy limit might not be enough. The差額 will come from your personal assets — your house, your savings, your other investments.
The solution: an umbrella policy. This is a separate liability policy that sits on top of your landlord insurance and provides additional coverage. A $1 million umbrella policy typically costs $200-$400 per year and can protect your personal assets if a major lawsuit exceeds your landlord policy limits.
Most landlord policies cover loss of rental income if your property becomes uninhabitable. But the fine print reveals important limitations:
The coverage period is usually limited to 12 months. If it takes 18 months to rebuild after a fire, you are covering those final 6 months yourself.
The income calculation is based on your actual rental income, not market rate. If you are charging below market value, you might receive less than it would cost to temporarily house your tenants elsewhere.
Many policies do not cover loss of income due to voluntary vacate periods, remodeling, or if you simply cannot find tenants.
Standard landlord policies exclude certain perils entirely:
Flood damage: If a flood destroys your rental, you need separate flood insurance through the NFIP. Standard policies will not pay a dime.
Earthquake damage: In California, Oregon, and Washington, earthquake insurance is a separate policy. Standard landlord policies specifically exclude earthquake damage.
Maintenance-related damage: If your property deteriorates because you deferred maintenance, insurance will not cover it. They will claim you should have caught and fixed the problem before it became a claim.
After reviewing this with three different insurance agents and two property attorneys, here is what I recommend:
Get a landlord liability policy with at least $500,000 in coverage. The additional cost over a $100,000 policy is minimal — usually $100-$200 per year.
Add an umbrella policy with $1-2 million in coverage. The total additional cost is $300-$600 per year. If you have any personal assets worth protecting, this is non-negotiable.
Add tenant damage coverage and intentional acts coverage. The $200 per year could save you $30,000+ if you ever have a destructive tenant.
Document everything. Take photos of every room, every appliance, every system. Do this before your tenant moves in, do it annually, do it when you make any improvements. Your documentation is your best defense in any dispute.
The lawsuit eventually settled for $95,000. My policy paid its maximum of $100,000, so I was protected — barely. But it was the wake-up call I needed to completely rethink my coverage.
Today I carry $500,000 in landlord liability, a $1 million umbrella policy, tenant damage coverage, and flood insurance on my properties in flood zones. My annual insurance costs are 40% higher than before the lawsuit. But now I sleep at night knowing that if something goes wrong, I will not lose everything I have built.
The lawsuit notice still sits in my filing cabinet as a reminder: landlord insurance is not about meeting the minimum required coverage. It is about protecting everything you have built from the worst-case scenarios that can actually happen.
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