Rental Property Insurance in Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Landlord insurance for Florida single-family and small multi-family rental properties — building, liability, and loss of rent.
Fort Lauderdale Market Note
Fort Lauderdale's waterfront condo towers and Intracoastal communities face elevated wind and flood exposure. Many buildings here are 30–50 years old, requiring careful attention to roof age and building envelope condition when placing coverage.
Rental Property Insurance in Fort Lauderdale: Market Overview
Broward County's rental vacancy rate consistently runs below 5%, creating strong demand for landlord and apartment building coverage. The Las Olas and Victoria Park corridors have seen significant multifamily investment activity.
Florida landlords face a unique combination of risks: one of the nation's most litigious tenant environments, hurricane exposure across the entire state, and a booming short-term rental market that can void standard homeowners policies. A dedicated landlord policy (DP-3 or commercial property) is essential to protect your investment and rental income stream.
What's Covered
Dwelling Coverage (Coverage A)
Covers the physical structure of your rental home — walls, roof, built-in appliances, and attached structures — against fire, wind, hail, and other covered perils.
Other Structures
Covers detached garages, fences, sheds, and other structures on the property not attached to the main dwelling.
Landlord Liability
Pays for legal defense and damages if a tenant or visitor is injured on your property and sues you.
Loss of Rental Income
Replaces lost rent while your property is being repaired after a covered loss, protecting your cash flow.
Landlord Contents Coverage
Optional coverage for appliances, furniture, and other items you own that are kept on the rental property for tenant use.
Vacant Property Endorsement
Extends coverage during vacancy periods between tenants — standard policies often exclude or limit coverage after 30–60 days of vacancy.
Common Risks in Fort Lauderdale
- Tenant injury lawsuits (premises liability)
- Hurricane and wind damage to roof and structure
- Tenant damage beyond the security deposit
- Loss of rent during extended repairs after a storm
- Fire spreading from tenant cooking or electrical issues
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a homeowners policy and a rental property policy?
A standard homeowners policy (HO-3) is designed for owner-occupied homes and typically excludes coverage when the home is rented out. A landlord policy (DP-3) or commercial property policy is specifically designed for rental properties and includes loss-of-rent coverage, which a standard HO-3 does not.
Does rental property insurance cover short-term rentals (Airbnb/VRBO) in Florida?
Standard landlord policies generally do not cover short-term vacation rentals. If you rent through Airbnb or VRBO, you need a short-term rental policy or a commercial property policy with a vacation rental endorsement. Airbnb's Host Protection Insurance provides some coverage but has significant gaps.
How much does rental property insurance cost in Florida?
Florida rental property insurance typically costs $1,200–$3,500 per year for a single-family home, depending on location, age, construction type, and replacement cost. Coastal properties and older homes with aging roofs pay significantly more. Bright Coast works with multiple carriers to find the best rate for your specific property.
Is loss of rent coverage worth it for Florida landlords?
Absolutely. After a major hurricane, repairs to a Florida rental property can take 6–18 months. Without loss-of-rent coverage, you're still paying your mortgage and insurance while collecting zero rent. Most landlord policies include 12 months of loss-of-rent coverage — make sure yours does.
Protect Your Fort Lauderdale Property Today
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