Landlord Insurance Canada: Protect Your Rental Property & Income

Rental property is one of the smartest long-term investments—but it can quickly turn into a financial liability if not properly insured. PolicyHub offers landlord insurance in Canada designed for tenant-occupied properties, helping you reduce coverage gaps and protect both your rental property and rental income. Get tailored coverage for rental homes, condos, and multi-unit buildings so your investment—and cash flow—stay secure.

What Landlord Insurance Covers for Rental Properties

Coverage varies by insurer, location, and property type, but rental property insurance often includes:

1. Dwelling coverage for the building structure

Protects the physical building—walls, roof, and built-ins—against covered events, safeguarding your rental property itself

Rebuild costs for your rental property can increase over time due to renovations, inflation, and upgrades. Being underinsured may leave you with less recovery than expected when a loss occurs.

2. Landlord contents coverage for items you own, not what the tenant owns

In many rental properties, landlords still own:

  • Appliances owned by the landlord

  • Light fixtures provided with the rental

  • Window coverings supplied by the landlord

  • Shared-area furniture in multi-unit properties

Tenants should insure their own belongings; landlord insurance covers only what you own.

3. Liability Coverage – Your Most Important Protection

Landlords can be held responsible for alleged negligence, and liability claims can be costly even when disputed. Landlord insurance protects you in situations such as:

  • A tenant or guest slips on icy stairs
  • A railing fails
  • An injury occurs on the property
  • A hazard leads to property damage or injury

For business owners with multiple units or larger assets, liability exposure is higher. Cutting corners on coverage can put your rental property and finances at risk.

4. Loss of Rental Income Coverage

If an insured event makes your rental property uninhabitable, landlord insurance can provide protection for lost rental income, depending on the policy wording and conditions. This coverage is important because your expenses continue even when tenants can’t occupy the unit, including:

  • Mortgage payments

  • Property taxes

  • Utilities (sometimes)

  • Maintenance costs

  • Condo fees for rental condos

Loss of rental income coverage helps protect the cash flow and financial stability of your rental investment.

5. Additional Coverages and Endorsements

Depending on your rental property and insurer, landlord insurance may offer optional coverages to better protect your investment, such as:

  • Water-related coverages

  • Sewer backup protection

  • Vandalism or malicious damage

  • Vacancy permissions and conditions

  • Higher coverage limits for landlord-owned items

PolicyHub helps you identify which options matter most for your property type and tenant profile, ensuring your rental investment is fully protected.

Choosing the Right Policy: Owner vs Rental

This is one of the most important decisions for your rental property insurance.

  • If you live in the property, you typically need an owner-occupied home policy.

  • If you rent it to tenants, you need landlord or rental property coverage.

  • If you rent out part of your home (like a basement suite), you may need a policy that reflects mixed use.

The key principle is simple: the insurance policy must match the property’s actual use to ensure you’re fully protected.

Rental Insurance Considerations for Business Owners

If you treat rental properties as part of your business or wealth plan, these are the common operational realities to consider for landlord insurance:

Higher net worth can increase liability risk for landlords. Ensure your landlord insurance limits reflect potential exposure.

Multiple units can increase exposure, complexity, and the need for consistent coverage structure across properties.

Landlords often need proof of insurance for:

  • refinancing

  • lenders

  • condo boards (in some cases)

  • property management agreements

This is a best practice in many cases. Tenants insuring their belongings and liability reduces disputes and improves risk transfer.

Higher net worth can increase liability risk for landlords. Ensure your landlord insurance limits reflect potential exposure.

Why Landlord Insurance Beats Standard Home Insurance

Tenant-Occupied Properties Carry Different Risks Than Owner-Occupied Homes:

Incorrectly declared rental use can leave your property unprotected. PolicyHub provides landlord insurance for tenant-occupied properties.

If you use rental properties as part of your financial plan, protect them like any investment with landlord insurance

Landlord Risk Moments That Can Trigger Insurance Claims 

Many landlords assume unpaid rent is the biggest risk. While that’s a business concern, common insurance loss drivers include:

Leaks, appliance failures, and plumbing issues can escalate quickly—especially in condos or multi-unit rental properties. The impact is rarely limited to drywall and often includes:

  • Damage spreading to other areas or units

  • Disputes over responsibility between parties

  • Longer repair timelines that extend vacancy periods

Water coverage is one of the most important areas to review in landlord insurance.

Even a small fire or smoke event can make a unit uninhabitable. Cleanup, repairs, and inspections can take time, increasing downtime and loss exposure for rental properties.

Slip-and-falls, injuries, hazards, and failure-to-maintain allegations are common. The risk isn’t just a settlement—it’s legal costs, time, and operational distraction. Liability coverage is a core protection for landlords.

Rental properties are often vacant between tenants. Some coverages change or restrict protection after a set vacancy period. Your landlord policy should reflect this reality—and the conditions should be clearly understood.

Condo rentals involve multiple layers of insurance and responsibility, including:

  • The condo corporation’s policy

  • Your landlord insurance policy

  • Your tenant’s renter insurance

  • Building bylaws and insurance requirements

Misalignment between these can create coverage gaps.

PolicyHub helps with documentation support once coverage is active.

How PolicyHub Simplifies Landlord Insurance for Rental Properties

Step 1:

Accurately Confirm Property and Occupancy

  • Align policy to tenant-occupied, mixed-use, or vacant property 

  • Match coverage to actual property use: tenant, mixed, or vacant

Step 2:

Reduce Coverage Gaps in Landlord Insurance

Common Landlord Insurance Gaps We Help Close:

  • Water-related coverage options and deductibles
  • Vacancy conditions and permissions

  • Liability coverage limits

  • Condo-specific exposures when applicable

  • Loss-of-rent protection where available

Step 3:

Make Policy Renewal a Strategic Moment

Renewal isn’t just about a price change. It’s your annual opportunity to optimize landlord insurance for your rental property:

  • Update rebuild cost assumptions

  • Reflect renovations and upgrades

  • Adjust deductibles

  • Align liability limits with growing assets

  • Review policy structure for better coverage

What You Need for a Landlord Insurance Quote

To provide accurate landlord insurance options, we typically ask: 

Don’t worry if you don’t know every detail—PolicyHub helps identify what matters most for your landlord insurance

Protect Your Rental Property Like an Investment

Landlord Insurance FAQ

Most frequent questions and answers

Yes. Tenant insurance protects the tenant’s belongings and their liability. Landlord insurance protects the building, landlord-owned contents, and landlord liability.

Vacancy can affect coverage. It’s important to understand and disclose vacancy periods and follow policy conditions.

Not recommended. Rental occupancy changes risk assumptions. The policy should match how the property is used.

It depends on the policy wording and selected options. Water-related review is one of the most important parts of a landlord insurance setup.

Typically, insurance focuses on insured physical losses and liability. Some policies may offer loss-of-rent coverage when an insured event makes the unit uninhabitable (subject to conditions). Unpaid rent due to non-payment is generally a separate business/tenant risk.

Yes. We can help you structure coverage property-by-property and keep it consistent.

Usually coverage aligned to landlord use plus awareness of condo corporation policy layers and bylaws. We’ll guide you.

Often yes—it reduces disputes and helps ensure tenants have coverage for their belongings and liability.

This depends on your exposure and assets. Many landlords prioritize strong liability protection.

Start a quote and tell us your property type and occupancy. If you rent out a condo or have mixed-use (suite) situations, mention it upfront.