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Updated 22 days ago, 10/30/2024
Surplus Insurance Line for Student Rentals
I'm currently doing my due diligence on a multifamily that's located within a college campus. It's current tenants are not students but my plan is to replace the tenants with students within the year after purchase.
My insurance provider has given me a warning that this will change my insurance from a standard dwelling/fire to a surplus line, specific to undergrad tenants. The premium will go from $4k to nearly $12k. How are landlords with student rentals handling this? Do most landlords just keep this under wraps?
Thanks in advance!
Quote from @Mark Esperti:
I'm currently doing my due diligence on a multifamily that's located within a college campus. It's current tenants are not students but my plan is to replace the tenants with students within the year after purchase.
My insurance provider has given me a warning that this will change my insurance from a standard dwelling/fire to a surplus line, specific to undergrad tenants. The premium will go from $4k to nearly $12k. How are landlords with student rentals handling this? Do most landlords just keep this under wraps?
Thanks in advance!
I assume this is 1-4 units? Student housing is a definite no for many or perhaps most/all standard carriers but pricing doesn't necessarily have to be triple. It will be more certainly.
Just because you're renting to students, doesn't necessarily make it student housing in the eyes of an insurance company. The insurance company will have a very specific definition of what "Student Housing" means to them. Such as extended periods of vacancy between semesters...
I have a MTR that is close to a university campus and my current tenants are students, but they also passed all the usual tenant screening in the same way that I've rented to other mid-term tenants in the past.
Hi Mark, try Berlin insurance out of Worcester. They have given me great rates.
Jim
@Mark Esperti - I also recommend checking with prime insurance, they work a lot with investors and can really find the right product for you. I utilize them on all my rentals in Worcester, over 200+.
Also, one of my buddies owns a ton of student rentals near clark. Happy to make an introduction, feel free to shoot me a DM.
- Andrew Freed
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I think working with an insurance broker is a great way to go to derive the most competitive quote at no cost to you.
I also think that you can increase your deductible up to say 5k as well as request your tenants carry renters insurance. This will reduce likelihood of a claim and your premium