Legal & Compliance

Insurance Every Property Manager Needs

March 6, 2026 · 13 min read · By PropertyCEO

One lawsuit can destroy a property management company. A tenant slips on an icy walkway. A maintenance worker gets injured on the job. An owner claims you were negligent in screening a tenant who caused $50,000 in damage. Without the right insurance, any of these scenarios could bankrupt you.

Insurance isn't sexy, but it's the foundation that lets you take risks, grow your business, and sleep at night. Here's exactly what coverage you need — and what to require from your owners and vendors.

Table of Contents

  1. Errors & Omissions (E&O) Insurance
  2. General Liability Insurance
  3. Workers' Compensation
  4. Cyber Liability Insurance
  5. Commercial Umbrella Policy
  6. Business Owner's Policy (BOP)
  7. What to Require from Property Owners
  8. What to Require from Vendors
  9. Tenant Insurance Requirements
  10. What Insurance Costs

Errors & Omissions (E&O) Insurance

This is the most important policy for property managers. E&O insurance (also called professional liability insurance) covers claims that you made a mistake in your professional duties — failed to properly screen a tenant, missed a lease violation, didn't maintain a property correctly, made an error in financial reporting.

What E&O Covers

E&O insurance typically costs $1,000-3,000/year for a small PM company. That's less than a single hour of legal defense. If you manage other people's properties without E&O coverage, you're one claim away from losing everything.

Choosing an E&O Policy

General Liability Insurance

General liability covers bodily injury and property damage claims from third parties. If someone gets hurt at your office, at a property showing, or due to your company's operations, this is what protects you.

What General Liability Covers

Recommended Coverage

Workers' Compensation

If you have employees (including maintenance staff, leasing agents, or office workers), workers' comp is required in nearly every state. It covers medical expenses and lost wages if an employee is injured on the job.

Even if your state exempts businesses with fewer than 3-5 employees, consider carrying workers' comp anyway. One injury claim without coverage can be devastating.

Cyber Liability Insurance

You store Social Security numbers, bank account information, and financial data for hundreds or thousands of people. A data breach isn't just embarrassing — it's expensive.

What Cyber Liability Covers

Cyber liability is increasingly important as property managers store more data digitally and process payments online. A basic policy costs $500-2,000/year — well worth it given the average data breach costs $150+ per compromised record.

Commercial Umbrella Policy

An umbrella policy extends the limits of your underlying policies (GL, auto, E&O). If a claim exceeds your base policy limit, the umbrella kicks in. For PMs managing high-value properties or large portfolios, this is critical.

Business Owner's Policy (BOP)

A BOP bundles general liability and commercial property insurance (covering your office, equipment, furniture) into one policy at a lower cost than buying them separately. Many insurers offer PM-specific BOPs.

What to Require from Property Owners

Your management agreement should require owners to maintain adequate insurance — and name your PM company as an additional insured.

Owner Insurance Requirements

Never manage a property where the owner refuses to add you as additional insured. If a tenant sues over a property condition (mold, lead paint, structural issue), the owner's policy needs to cover you. Without the additional insured endorsement, you're exposed.

What to Require from Vendors

Every vendor who works on your managed properties should carry insurance. This protects you and your owners from liability for vendor-caused injuries or damage.

Minimum Vendor Insurance Requirements

Collect certificates of insurance (COIs) before any vendor starts work. Store them in your vendor management system and track expiration dates. No current COI = no work.

Tenant Insurance Requirements

Requiring renter's insurance is one of the smartest things you can do as a PM. It protects tenants' belongings (reducing disputes), provides liability coverage (reducing claims against owners), and costs tenants only $15-30/month.

What Insurance Costs

PolicyAnnual Cost (Small PM)Annual Cost (Mid-Size PM)
Errors & Omissions$1,000-2,500$2,500-5,000
General Liability$500-1,500$1,500-4,000
Workers' Comp$1,000-3,000$3,000-10,000+
Cyber Liability$500-1,500$1,500-3,000
Commercial Umbrella$500-1,500$1,500-3,000
BOP (GL + Property)$750-2,000$2,000-5,000
Total$4,250-12,000$12,000-30,000

Insurance is a real startup cost, but it's one of the most important investments you'll make. Factor it into your pricing strategy — these costs should be covered by your management fees, not eating into your profit margins.

Work with an insurance broker who specializes in property management. They'll know the PM-specific risks, can bundle policies for savings, and will ensure you're not over- or under-insured.

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