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Key Reasons Landlords Should Require Renters Insurance

Key Reasons Landlords Should Require Renters Insurance

If you’re a landlord, you have a lot of responsibilities to your tenants. You’re required to keep your rental properties habitable, of course, and to have your own property insurance. You may even choose to take extra steps to protect your tenants by equipping your properties with easily changed electronic locks, for their safety and your convenience.

In addition to these steps, landlords have to enforce rules and standards that protect your tenants and their neighbors, like requiring tenants to keep hallways clear of trash or possessions, not allowing them to smoke too close to the building, and performing annual inspections.

Still, amidst all these requirements there’s at least one thing more landlords should be doing that they seem to overlook – requiring tenants to have renters insurance.

What Does Renters Insurance Do?

If, as a landlord, you’re required to have specific landlord insurance, why would your tenants also need to be covered? This is a sometimes contentious issue with tenants, at least, who don’t think these policies should be required, but landlords can justify requiring renters insurance in a number of ways. Key rationales you may offer include:

Requirement Concerns

Many landlords are concerned that they can’t actually require their tenants to have renters insurance, but as a landlord you have a great deal of leeway and, as a private property owner, you’re permitted to set your own terms as long as they are not discriminatory – and requiring renters insurance isn’t. As such, landlords can generally require that tenants present proof of an active policy at the time of rental and upon request throughout, especially upon renewal. Though there are often exceptions for individuals in social housing, whose rent is subsidized, for private apartments, this is a reasonable request.

While there are many things the state can’t require people to do because it is a private matter, in contracts between two private citizens – which is precisely what a rental agreement is – there are fewer limits on what is allowed. As a landlord, then, it’s just good business to require renters insurance and, if your tenants can see through the small added cost, they’ll quickly see that it’s just the smart thing to do.