The Misconception That Costs People
Most renters assume their landlord's insurance covers their belongings. It doesn't. Your landlord's policy covers the building: the walls, the roof, the structure itself. Everything inside your apartment, your furniture, laptop, clothes, bike, TV, is entirely your responsibility. If there's a fire, a burst pipe, or a break-in, your landlord's insurer owes you nothing.
Renter's insurance fills that gap. Most people don't know they need it until they've already needed it.
What It Actually Covers
What It Doesn't Cover
Renter's insurance is not unlimited. A few things worth knowing:
- Floods and earthquakes are typically excluded from standard policies. If you're in a flood zone or earthquake-prone area, you may need separate coverage.
- High-value items like expensive jewelry, cameras, or musical instruments may have sub-limits. A policy might cover personal property up to $30,000 but cap jewelry at $1,500. You can add a "rider" for specific items.
- Roommate's belongings are not covered unless they're listed on your policy. Each person generally needs their own.
- Your car is not covered by renter's insurance. That's what auto insurance is for. However, items stolen from your car (a laptop left in the back seat) may be covered under personal property.
Actual Replacement Cost vs. Actual Cash Value
This distinction matters more than most people realize when choosing a policy:
- Actual Cash Value (ACV): Pays what your items were worth at the time of the loss, accounting for depreciation. Your 3-year-old laptop that cost $1,200 might only pay out $500 because it's depreciated. Cheaper policies often use ACV.
- Replacement Cost Value (RCV): Pays what it costs to replace the item with a new equivalent today. That same laptop would pay out closer to the current cost of a comparable model. Costs a bit more monthly but significantly better coverage.
Replacement cost coverage is almost always worth paying a little more for.
Renter's insurance typically costs $15–$30 per month, depending on your location, the amount of coverage, and your deductible. That's $180–$360 per year to protect everything you own.
How to Get It
Estimate what your stuff is worth
Walk through your apartment and make a rough list: furniture, electronics, clothes, kitchen items. Most people are surprised how quickly it adds up. $15,000 to $30,000 is common even for modest apartments. This determines how much personal property coverage you need.
Get quotes
Start with your auto insurer. Bundling renter's with auto insurance usually gets you a discount on both. Also check Lemonade, which is known for low rates and fast claims, and comparison sites like Policygenius. Most policies can be set up in under 10 minutes.
Choose replacement cost coverage
When comparing policies, look for "replacement cost value" rather than "actual cash value." The premium difference is usually small. The payout difference after a claim can be enormous.
Document your belongings
After you're covered, take a video walkthrough of your apartment: open closets, show electronics, capture serial numbers on valuable items. Store this video somewhere off-site (cloud storage or email it to yourself). If you ever need to file a claim, this documentation makes the process much smoother.
When Your Landlord Requires It
More landlords are requiring renter's insurance as a condition of the lease. This is actually in your interest. It protects both of you. If your lease requires it, you'll typically need to provide proof of coverage (a declarations page from your insurer) before or shortly after move-in. The required liability minimum is usually $100,000.
A neighbor's apartment catches fire. The fire spreads and damages your unit. The sprinklers go off and ruin your furniture and electronics. Your landlord's insurance covers the building repairs. Without renter's insurance, you pay for everything out of pocket. With it, you file a claim, pay your deductible, and your insurer handles the rest, including a hotel while repairs are made.