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’s Why Your Tenants Should Get

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Renters Insurance

By: Team Lemonade, with lemonade.com

Renting out your property to tenants can be a hassle, and often involves thorough screening of potential renters and checking off tasks on a neverending to-do list. The phone calls, back and forth paperwork, and overall bureaucracy involved with leasing out your place to temporary tenants is a minor headache, at best.

That’s why making sure your tenants are fully protected with their own HO4 insurance policy is a no-brainer. In fact, you probably should make your tenants’ insurance mandatory in your leasing agreement – that way, you can increase the coverage on your rental, and lower your costs in the long term. Think of it as another line of defense when there’s an emergency situation.

How does my tenants’ insurance help me?

When your tenants have their own insurance policy, it’s an additional layer of protection for you, the landlord. When unfortunate things like fire cause damage to your place, their renters insurance policy can help repair the damage, reducing the amount you or your insurance company have to pay.

This keeps your own policy premium lower by reducing the claims on your insurance, and helps you avoid costly legal fees. And not to mention, it saves you a ton of time!

In addition, renters insurance will help keep your relationship with your tenants healthy, especially when a major damage or loss occurs. With renters insurance, you can avoid disputes over who has to cover costs of damages.

Oh, and one more perk: Tenants with renters insurance are less likely to sue you to compensate them for a loss. In fact, a survey by Joshua Tree Consulting estimated that landlords in large properties juggle eight ‘nuisance’ insurance claims per property each year.

What does renters insurance cover?

If your tenants choose to purchase a renters insurance policy, they will get three main coverages: personal property, temporary living expenses (also called ‘loss of use’), and personal liability & medical bills.

We’ll break down what each of these coverages mean for you, and your tenant.

Personal property coverage

Tenants tend to think that since they don’t own the place, they don’t need extra protection for their stuff. That’s a very common mistake, and it’s important the tenants know they won’t be covered if a kitchen fire damages their stuff, or their laptop is stolen. Your landlord insurance doesn’t cover the tenant, or the tenant’s stuff.

Temporary living expenses

Imagine this: a mysterious fire causes extensive damage to your building, displacing your tenants and damaging their stuff. Not only would this cost your uninsured tenants serious $$, but they would also likely need to blame someone for this incident, and that blame may fall on you.

In cases like these, your tenants’ renters insurance policies can come to your rescue. It can help pay for your tenants’ temporary living expenses, reimburse them for their lost items, and reshift the focus from you, to your tenants’ insurer.

Personal liability & medical bills

Let’s be real: There are many situations where personal liability coverage comes in handy – say, your tenant hosts a party and someone slips and falls, or their neighbor comes over to help make dinner and cuts their finger while chopping the salad.

Renters insurance policies include liability and medical payments to others, so if someone claims to be injured due to your tenant’s actions or negligence, their renters insurance may cover legal fees and may also pay to cover damages they’re found liable for.

If it’s something small (read: under $5,000), their medical payments to others coverage will kick in, but if someone decides to take some unfriendly steps and sues your tenant, their personal liability coverage will have their back.

Liability coverage can make a huge difference when legal bills and medical fees start racking up! So if your tenant unfortunately caused damage not only to your home, but to other units in the building, they’ll be in a costly bind.

No one wants a bunch of insurance companies chasing them for damages they caused. Your tenant will thank you for making them get their own tenant liability insurance.

How does renters insurance help my tenants?

Making renters insurance mandatory for your tenants doesn’t have to be a deal-breaker.

Here are some of the benefits of renters insurance you should make sure your tenant understands:

Renters insurance is affordable!

A common misconception about renters insurance is that it’s pricey, so communicate to your tenants that the average cost of renters insurance is probably lower than expected and that a very basic renters insurance policy can cost as little as $5 a month (thanks to the help of AI)! Most policies allow you to customize your coverages to fit your lifestyle needs, so renters insurance doesn’t have to be a significant out-of-pocket expense.

Renters insurance covers the tenant’s family

A renters policy may cover others living with your tenant, too! If your tenant is living with anyone related to them by blood, marriage, or adoption, they’ll automatically be covered by the tenant’s renters insurance policy. They’ll just have to make sure to get enough coverage for everyone.

They can determine just how much coverage they need when they add other people to their policy. If they’re living with their significant other, they’ll need to be added to the policy as what’s called an ‘additional insured.’

FYI – roommates aren’t covered by a typical renters insurance policy. You’ll have to tell them to get their own!

Dog bites, check.

If your tenant has a dog, and you were wondering, “does renters insurance cover dog bites?” you’re in luck. If your tenants’ dog bites someone, their policy has them covered.

The cool thing about this one is it applies both when they are at home or at the park. There are two exceptions though: They’re typically not covered if the dog has a history of biting, or if the dog is categorized as high-risk or “vicious.”

Help your tenants help you

And that’s just a part of the benefits of renters insurance for your tenants. You can be an even better landlord if you help them figure out how much renters insurance costs. Everyone’s lifestyle is different, so be sure to help ‘em figure out what kind of coverages their lifestyle requires.

Part of figuring out how much coverage your tenants need is determining how much their stuff is worth. It’ll help them ensure their coverage amounts reflect the real value of their stuff.

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