Landlord Insurance Canada

Rental property insurance: loss of rent coverage, landlord liability, tenant damage protection — everything Canadian property investors need to know

Why Standard Home Insurance Fails Landlords

One of the most common and costly mistakes Canadian rental property owners make is assuming their standard home insurance policy covers their rental property. It does not. Standard residential home insurance is designed for owner-occupied properties. The moment you rent out a property — even a basement suite in your primary home — you need to inform your insurer and likely add a rental endorsement or purchase a dedicated landlord (rental property) insurance policy.

Using a standard home insurance policy for a rental property can void your coverage entirely. If a fire starts in your rental unit and you haven't disclosed the tenancy to your insurer, they may deny the claim on the basis of material non-disclosure. The financial consequences — losing a property worth hundreds of thousands of dollars without any insurance payout — can be catastrophic.

What Landlord Insurance Covers

Building / Dwelling Coverage

Covers the physical structure of the rental property against named perils: fire, wind, hail, explosion, water damage from internal sources, and others depending on your policy form (basic, broad, or comprehensive). Coverage should be at replacement cost — the full cost to rebuild the property, not its market value.

Loss of Rental Income

If your rental property is damaged by a covered peril and becomes uninhabitable, loss of rental income coverage replaces the rent you would have collected during the repair period. This is one of the most important coverages for landlords — a 6-month major repair can represent $15,000–$50,000 in lost rent. Standard coverage is typically 12 months of lost rent; some policies offer 24 months.

Landlord Liability

Covers you if a tenant, visitor, or delivery person is injured on your rental property and sues you. Slip-and-fall on icy steps, failure to repair a hazardous condition, or injury from a building defect — all can generate substantial liability claims. Minimum $2 million liability coverage is recommended for rental properties; $5 million for multi-unit buildings.

Tenant Damage Coverage

Standard landlord policies cover damage caused by covered perils, but intentional damage by tenants is generally excluded. Some insurers offer optional tenant damage riders that cover deliberate destruction, which can be relevant in difficult tenancy termination situations. This coverage is not universally available and varies significantly by insurer.

Landlord Contents

If you provide appliances, window coverings, or furnishings in your rental unit, landlord contents coverage protects these items. Tenants' own belongings are their responsibility — they need tenant insurance. Do not include tenant belongings in your landlord policy.

What Landlord Insurance Does NOT Cover

Vacancy Clause Warning: If your property is vacant for more than 30–60 consecutive days (varies by insurer), your policy may be partially or fully suspended. Always notify your insurer immediately when a property becomes vacant between tenants, and ask about vacancy insurance to maintain coverage.

Landlord Insurance Costs in Canada

Landlord insurance typically costs 15–25% more than an equivalent owner-occupied home insurance policy, reflecting the additional risks of tenancy. Approximate annual costs:

Property TypeAnnual Premium RangeNotes
Single-family rental home — Ontario$1,600–$2,400Higher in GTA, older homes cost more
Single-family rental — Alberta$1,400–$2,000Hail risk a major factor
Single-family rental — BC$1,500–$2,300High property values, earthquake optional
Basement suite (owner-occupied)+$200–$500/yr to primary policyEndorsement to existing policy
Duplex / triplex$2,000–$3,500Multi-unit premium, higher liability exposure
Condominium rental unit$600–$1,200Building covered by strata; need unit + liability

Requiring Tenant Insurance: A Landlord's Best Protection

The single best risk-management step a Canadian landlord can take — beyond adequate landlord insurance — is requiring all tenants to maintain tenant insurance as a condition of the lease.

Why this matters for landlords:

Enforcement: Ask for proof of tenant insurance (a certificate from the insurer) before handing over keys, and require renewal evidence annually. Some landlords verify coverage as part of the annual lease renewal process.

Key Differences: Owner-Occupied vs Rental Property Insurance

FeatureOwner-Occupied HomeLandlord/Rental Policy
OccupancyOwner lives thereTenants occupy; owner does not
Loss of rentN/AIncluded (rental income replacement)
Tenant damageN/AOptional rider with some insurers
Vacancy rules30–60 days typicalStricter — notify insurer between tenants
Premium vs equivalent homeBase rate15–25% higher
Liability limit recommended$2M$2M–$5M

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