What to review first
Start with the declarations page because it shows the named insured, rental address, policy period, limits, deductible, and endorsements.
Then read the definitions and exclusions. Those pages explain what words mean and which losses the policy will not cover.
- Match the rental address and named insureds.
- Check whether replacement cost is included or optional.
- Review liability, medical payments, and additional living expense limits.
- Look for special limits on jewelry, electronics, bikes, tools, and business property.
Where renters often get surprised
Many surprises come from assuming the landlord's policy covers tenant belongings. In most cases, the landlord policy protects the building owner, not the tenant's furniture, clothes, electronics, or temporary housing budget.
Another common surprise is flood. Standard renters policies usually treat flood as separate, so tenants in ground-floor, basement, coastal, or storm-prone areas should ask direct questions.
- Roommates may need their own policies unless listed properly.
- A pet deposit is different from animal liability coverage.
- A low deductible may matter more after a small theft or water loss.
- Receipts, photos, and serial numbers can make a claim much easier.
A practical next step
Build a one-page worksheet with the limit you want for belongings, the liability limit required by the lease, the deductible you can afford, and the endorsements you want to ask about.
Use the same worksheet with each insurer or licensed agent so the comparison stays consistent.
- Save every quote with the same date.
- Ask which discounts are already included.
- Request the policy form or sample coverage summary when available.
Related Reading
Reference Sources
Use public insurance resources and your policy documents to confirm definitions, consumer contacts, and coverage limits before buying or filing a claim.