Personal Insurance
Condo Insurance That Covers What Your HOA Policy Doesn't
Your condo association insures the building, but your belongings, your improvements, and your liability are your responsibility.
Condo insurance is a personal policy that protects your belongings, your unit's interior, and your liability as a condo owner or leaseholder. Your HOA's master policy typically covers the building structure and shared common areas, but it stops at your front door. If a pipe bursts, a fire damages your kitchen, or a guest slips in your hallway, the association's coverage won't step in for you.
Bittick places condo policies with multiple carriers, so we can match your coverage to what you actually own and what your specific association does and does not insure. Whether you own a unit in a Meridian high-rise or lease a condo near the Boise River, the gaps in association coverage tend to look the same.
Your condo needs protection beyond what the building covers.
From your personal belongings to liability when guests get hurt, we help you close the gaps in your coverage.
What this coverage includes
Personal property inside your unit
Your condo policy covers the physical belongings inside your unit: furniture, electronics, clothing, appliances, and similar items. If a covered event like a fire, theft, lightning strike, windstorm, or frozen pipe causes a loss, the policy pays to repair or replace what you lost. One important note: standard condo policies do not cover flood damage. If your building sits near the Boise River or in a low-lying part of the Treasure Valley, a separate flood policy is worth discussing.
Betterments, improvements, and fixtures you added
If you installed hardwood floors, upgraded kitchen cabinets, retiled the bathroom, or added built-in shelving, those improvements belong to you, not the association. The HOA master policy almost never covers them. A condo policy with betterments-and-improvements coverage protects the money you put into the unit beyond its original condition, so you are not starting over out-of-pocket if something destroys what you built.
Personal liability and damage to neighboring units
Liability coverage pays if you are legally responsible for someone else's injury or property damage. A guest who falls and breaks a wrist in your unit, or a slow leak from your washing machine that damages the condo below yours, can both turn into claims against you. Liability coverage handles legal defense costs and any resulting settlement, up to your policy limit. Medical payments coverage, a related piece of most condo policies, lets an injured guest submit their bills directly to your insurer without a lawsuit being necessary.
Additional living expenses if your unit becomes unlivable
If a covered loss forces you out of your condo while repairs happen, additional living expenses coverage picks up reasonable costs you would not otherwise have: hotel stays, short-term rentals, and meals above your normal spending. This coverage has a limit and a time cap, so it is worth knowing those numbers before you need them.
Loss assessment coverage
Loss assessment is the coverage most condo owners overlook until it is too late. If your association suffers a major loss and its own policy falls short, the board can pass the remaining cost to unit owners as a special assessment. Loss assessment coverage on your condo policy can absorb that bill up to your selected limit, which can range from a few thousand dollars to significantly more depending on what you choose.
Pairs well with
Flood Insurance
Standard condo policies exclude flood. If your building is near the Boise River, the Snake River plain, or any mapped flood zone, a separate flood policy through the NFIP or a private carrier closes that gap.
Learn more ›Scheduled Personal Property (Floater)
High-value items like jewelry, fine art, collectibles, and silverware typically face sub-limits under a standard condo policy. A scheduled floater insures them individually at their appraised value.
Umbrella Insurance
An umbrella policy sits above your condo liability limit and pays when a serious claim exceeds what your base policy covers. One significant injury claim can easily surpass a standard $100,000 liability limit.
Learn more ›Auto Insurance
Your condo policy doesn't follow your vehicle. If your car is parked in a shared garage or on the street, your auto policy is the one that covers it.
Learn more ›