California Insurance Education

Renters Insurance

Renters insurance is one of the most cost-effective forms of coverage available. For a relatively small premium, a renters policy provides personal property coverage, personal liability protection, and loss of use coverage. Yet many renters remain uninsured, assuming their landlord's policy covers their belongings — it does not.

01

What Renters Insurance Covers

A standard renters policy (HO-4) in California covers: personal property — furniture, electronics, clothing, and belongings — against covered perils; personal liability if someone is injured in your apartment; loss of use if your rental becomes uninhabitable due to a covered loss; and medical payments to others for small injuries on your premises.

02

How Much Coverage Do You Need

To determine how much personal property coverage you need, create a home inventory. Walk through your apartment and list everything you own with approximate values. Most people significantly underestimate their belongings until they add it up. Electronics, clothing, furniture, and hobby equipment add up quickly.

03

Liability Coverage for Renters

Renters liability coverage protects you if someone sues you for injuries or property damage you caused — whether in your apartment or away from home. Standard policies offer $100,000 in liability, but $300,000 is often recommended. If you have significant assets, an umbrella policy stacking above your renters liability provides broader protection.

04

What Renters Insurance Does Not Cover

Standard renters policies in California do not cover: flooding (requires separate policy); earthquakes (requires separate endorsement); bedbugs and vermin infestations; roommate property unless they are listed on the policy; business equipment above a modest limit; and vehicles. High-value items like jewelry require a scheduled personal property endorsement.

California-Specific Facts

What California Policyholders Need to Know

  • California renters insurance is not legally required but many landlords require it in leases
  • Earthquake coverage requires a separate policy or endorsement — critical in CA
  • CA renters policies typically start at $15-30/month for standard coverage
  • Loss of use coverage is particularly important in CA's tight rental markets after displacement
  • CDI can help renters who are denied coverage or have claims disputes
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Regulatory resource: California Department of Insurancehttps://www.insurance.ca.gov. The Insurance Professor provides education only — not legal or insurance advice.

Renters Insurance — Other States