Rental property insurance is a specialized policy for property owners who lease to tenants, covering the building, your personal property left on-site, lost rental income during repairs, and liability claims a tenant or visitor might bring against you. It is not the same as a homeowner's policy, because the risks you face as a landlord are different from the risks you face as an occupant. A standard home policy typically voids coverage the moment you hand over keys to a paying tenant. Here in the Treasure Valley, where a wave of transplants has turned a lot of Eagle and Meridian homeowners into accidental landlords, getting the right policy in place before the lease is signed matters.

What this coverage includes

Dwelling and structure coverage

This is the core of the policy. It covers physical damage to the rental structure itself from causes like fire, windstorm, hail, vandalism, and certain types of water damage. If a kitchen fire or a burst pipe during a hard Treasure Valley freeze causes structural damage, this coverage pays to repair or rebuild. It does not cover the tenant's belongings; that is the tenant's renters insurance policy to handle.

Loss of rental income

If a covered loss makes your unit uninhabitable and you cannot collect rent while repairs are underway, this portion of the policy reimburses you for the rental income you lose during that period. One thing to be clear about: this coverage kicks in because of physical damage to the property. It does not cover a tenant who simply stops paying rent or has to be removed through the eviction process. Eviction costs and rent default are not insured losses.

Landlord liability

Premises liability, as it applies here, covers you if a tenant or a guest is injured on your rental property and holds you financially responsible. A broken step, a patch of ice on an uncleared walkway, or a dispute over habitability that escalates to a lawsuit can all trigger liability claims. This coverage pays for your legal defense and any settlement or judgment up to your policy limit.

Personal property used to service the rental

If you leave appliances, furniture, or lawn equipment at the property for tenant use, those items belong to you and need to be insured under your policy, not the tenant's. Rental property insurance can include coverage for your personal property at the rental address, typically at lower limits than a homeowner's policy would carry for a primary residence, so it is worth inventorying what you have on-site.

Short-term vs. long-term rental coverage

A property rented on a month-to-month or annual lease and a property listed on a short-term vacation platform carry different risk profiles and often require different policy structures. Short-term rentals see higher tenant turnover, more frequent access by strangers, and liability patterns closer to a hospitality business. If you operate both types, they may need to be insured separately. Bittick can help you sort out which policy form fits each property.

Pairs well with

Umbrella Insurance

A personal umbrella policy adds a broad layer of liability coverage above the limits in your rental property policy. Landlords with one or more properties are common umbrella buyers because a serious tenant injury lawsuit can exceed a standard policy limit quickly.

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Flood Insurance

Standard rental property policies exclude flood damage. Properties near the Boise River, the Snake River floodplain, or in low-lying parts of Nampa or Caldwell may face meaningful flood exposure that needs a separate NFIP or private flood policy.

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Homeowners Insurance

If you own a primary residence in addition to your rental, your home insurance policy needs to be kept separate and current. Bittick can review both policies together to make sure there are no coverage gaps or duplications between them.

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Commercial Property Insurance

Landlords with multiple rental units or mixed-use properties may find that a commercial property policy better fits the scale and complexity of what they own. Bittick can evaluate whether a personal or commercial structure makes more sense for your portfolio.

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What this coverage protects against

Common risks and how this coverage addresses them. Tap any scenario to expand.

  • Fire damage shuts down your rental for two months.

    The risk

    A tenant accidentally leaves a burner on and a kitchen fire spreads to the adjacent wall before the fire department arrives. The unit is uninhabitable during repairs, and you cannot collect rent for eight weeks.

    How this coverage helps

    The dwelling coverage pays for the structural repairs and kitchen rebuild. The loss-of-rental-income portion reimburses you for the two months of rent you would have collected while the unit was down.

  • A guest is injured on your exterior stairs in winter.

    The risk

    A visitor to your Meridian rental property slips on ice that formed overnight on the exterior staircase. They sustain a broken wrist and contact an attorney about the medical costs and lost wages.

    How this coverage helps

    The landlord liability coverage in your rental property policy covers your legal defense and, if you are found responsible, the settlement or judgment up to your policy limit.

  • Frozen pipe floods a ground-floor unit between tenancies.

    The risk

    A stretch of sub-zero nights in January causes a supply line to freeze and burst inside the wall of your rental property while it sits vacant between leases. Water damages flooring, drywall, and the furnishings you left on-site.

    How this coverage helps

    Your policy's dwelling coverage pays for the structural water damage and the cost to dry out and repair the unit. Your personal property coverage addresses the damaged furnishings that belong to you.

  • Vandalism during a vacancy runs up a serious repair bill.

    The risk

    Your rental sits empty for three weeks after a tenant moves out. Before new tenants move in, someone breaks in and causes significant damage to interior fixtures, windows, and appliances.

    How this coverage helps

    Rental property policies generally cover vandalism as a named peril. The dwelling and personal property coverages work together to get the unit back into rentable condition.

  • A hailstorm damages the roof mid-lease.

    The risk

    A spring hailstorm common to the Treasure Valley punches through the shingles on your rental property's roof. The tenant notices ceiling staining and contacts you. A roofing contractor confirms significant hail damage.

    How this coverage helps

    The dwelling coverage covers the cost of the roof repair or replacement, minus your deductible. Addressing it promptly also limits any follow-on water intrusion that could escalate the claim.

  • Your short-term rental listing creates coverage exposure you did not expect.

    The risk

    You list your Eagle property on a vacation rental platform for several weeks during the summer. Mid-stay, a guest damages furniture and a plumbing fixture. You later learn your standard homeowner's policy had excluded the stay.

    How this coverage helps

    A short-term or vacation rental policy, or a rental property policy structured for that use, covers guest-caused damage and liability during those stays. Bittick can review your current policy and close the gap before the next booking.

  • A habitability dispute escalates into a lawsuit.

    The risk

    A tenant claims that a mold problem in the bathroom you were slow to remediate caused health issues and files a lawsuit seeking damages. Even if the claim is disputed, you need legal representation to defend yourself.

    How this coverage helps

    The liability portion of your rental property policy covers your legal defense costs and, if you are found liable, any judgment up to your coverage limit. Without that coverage, legal fees alone could be substantial.

Frequently asked questions

Is rental property insurance different from homeowners insurance?
Yes, and the difference matters. A standard homeowners policy is written for an owner-occupant and typically excludes or voids coverage once you rent the property to a paying tenant. Rental property insurance is underwritten for a landlord, meaning it accounts for higher liability exposure, the risk of tenant-caused damage, and lost rental income during a covered repair period.
How much does rental property insurance cost in Idaho?
Premium depends on the property's location, construction type, replacement cost, your liability limit, and whether you carry optional endorsements like equipment breakdown or additional loss-of-rents coverage. As an independent agency, Bittick shops the policy across multiple carriers to find competitive pricing for the coverage you actually need. Call our Eagle office and we can give you a real number once we know what you own.
Does my policy cover me if a tenant stops paying rent?
No. Rental income coverage under a standard rental property policy only applies when a covered physical loss, like fire or storm damage, makes the unit uninhabitable. Rent default and eviction costs are not insured losses under any standard policy form. Some landlords address rent default risk through tenant screening and lease terms rather than insurance.
Do tenants need their own insurance too?
Tenants need renters insurance to cover their own belongings and their personal liability. Your rental property policy protects the building and your interests as the owner; it does not extend to a tenant's furniture, electronics, or personal liability. Many Idaho landlords require proof of renters insurance as a lease condition, which is a reasonable practice.
I own several rental properties in the Treasure Valley. Do I need a separate policy for each one?
Not necessarily. Landlords with multiple properties often consolidate coverage under a portfolio or dwelling fire policy that covers several addresses under one structure, which can simplify administration and sometimes reduce cost. For larger portfolios or mixed-use properties, a commercial property policy may be the more practical fit. Bittick can review what you own and recommend the right structure.
Does Bittick write rental property insurance outside Idaho?
Yes. Bittick is licensed in CA, CO, ID, NV, OR, TX, VA, and WA. Our San Antonio office also serves Texas landlords in the Hill Country and the greater San Antonio metro. If you own rental property in more than one state, we can often work with you across those states from a single relationship.

Talk to a Bittick agent about your rental property

We will review what you own, identify any gaps in your current coverage, and place the policy that fits your properties and your budget.

Don't like forms? Contact us at 208-609-3511 or email us.