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Kate Purse
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  • New to Real Estate
  • Valencia, CA
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Type of Insurance for SFH rental property?

Kate Purse
Pro Member
  • New to Real Estate
  • Valencia, CA
Posted Mar 12 2023, 12:09

I'm buying a SFH as a residential rental property and wanted advice on what type of insurance I need. Some of the forum responses are a few years old and I don't know if policies or views on policies have changed since then. Deets:  SFH, 2/1, straight up residential rental, I am the property manager, no LLC as of now.  

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Nathan Grabau
  • Realtor
  • Longmont, CO
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Nathan Grabau
  • Realtor
  • Longmont, CO
Replied Mar 12 2023, 12:18

Standard insurance, with a rental rider on it. I would make sure in your lease you require tenants to get renters insurance. Their renters insurance will cover things like damage they cause or displacement costs. 

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Randy Rodenhouse
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  • Charleston, SC
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Randy Rodenhouse
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  • Investor
  • Charleston, SC
Replied Mar 12 2023, 17:16

You need to get a landlord policy on the property. I would get a pretty high amount of liability coverage since liability insurance is very inexpensive.  I also have the tenants get renters insurance and have them put you on the policy.

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Eliott Elias#3 BRRRR - Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat Contributor
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Eliott Elias#3 BRRRR - Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat Contributor
  • Investor
  • Austin, TX
Replied Mar 12 2023, 20:00

You need a landlord policy. Talk to a insurance agent about your options ie. what the extent of your coverage will look like. 

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Alex L.
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Youngstown, OH
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Alex L.
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Youngstown, OH
Replied Mar 12 2023, 21:13

Talk to an (independent) insurance agent who is familiar with real estate investment insurance. 

When I first got in the game not too long ago, I had 1 SFH. I've worked in insurance for about 5 years (personal lines, not commercial) so I knew that I could either (a) get a standard homeowner's policy with a rental rider, or (b) get a dwelling fire policy, which is what most professional landlords get (the major difference is whether or not the contents of the home are insured). So, I go a dwelling policy for the ACV of the property, and the cheapest I found was for $510/year through Foremost by using a local run-of-the-mill independent agent. The ACV limit was $65k, and I had bought the house for $18k, so I was comfortable simply taking the $65k and walking away if the house god forbid burnt down.

Then I started getting more serious about real estate investing, and bought two more SFHs at the same time. Called up the agent's office, was quoted for $700/yr and $650/yr for both houses, which would give them their own dwelling fire policies. I bit the bullet and paid the price, the ACV limit was for $50k for each property, and I paid $22k and $25k so no big deal. But then about two weeks later I joined a local real estate FB group, and learned about everyone's go-to insurance agency in the area. Gave them a call, told them my situation, and they put me together a business policy. It was a single policy for a business ("Description: LANDLORD, Type: individual/sole proprietor") that included all 3 properties, had all the previous coverage I had including increased liability limits AND ACV values by about 55%, and the cost? Just $620/yr through American National.

I'm not sure if you can get a business policy for just a single rental... I don't see why you couldn't, but again, my personal in depth experience with insurance is personal lines, not commercial. Either way, definitely see which agents in your area are landlord-friendly. It pays to look around. In my case, it saved me over $1200/yr.