Apartment renters insurance

If you're renting an apartment or house, here's something most renters don't know: your landlord's insurance covers the building — not your stuff. If there's a fire, flood, or break-in, you're on your own without renters insurance. Here's why it's one of the best financial deals available.

What Renters Insurance Covers

Personal Property

Your belongings — furniture, electronics, clothing, jewelry, bikes — are covered if damaged or stolen. Coverage applies both inside your home and in some cases away from home (your laptop stolen from a coffee shop, for example).

Personal Liability

If someone is injured in your apartment and sues you, renters insurance covers legal costs and damages — typically up to $100,000 or more. It also covers accidental damage you cause to others' property.

Additional Living Expenses

If your apartment becomes uninhabitable due to a covered event (fire, water damage), renters insurance pays for a hotel and meals while you're displaced.

Medical Payments to Others

Covers minor injuries to guests in your home, regardless of fault — helping prevent small incidents from becoming expensive lawsuits.

Cost reality: Renters insurance typically costs $15–$30/month — about 50 cents a day. Yet only about 55% of renters in the US have it.

What Renters Insurance Does NOT Cover

How to Get the Most from Renters Insurance

  1. Create a home inventory: Document your belongings with photos or video — this makes claims far easier
  2. Choose replacement cost value: Pay a little more for RCV so you get enough to buy a new item, not the depreciated value
  3. Increase your liability limits: Standard $100K is a good start, but consider $300K for better protection
  4. Bundle with auto insurance: Most insurers offer discounts when you bundle renters and auto policies

Bottom Line

Renters insurance is one of the most affordable and underutilized forms of protection available. If you're renting and don't have it, get a quote today — you'll likely be surprised at how cheap it is.