A rental property in Tucson, Arizona
Home / Landlord Insurance

It isn't a house. It's income.

A rental needs a policy built for the building, the liability, and the rent. Homeowners insurance on a tenant-occupied property is a claim waiting to be denied.

DP-3
The Policy A Rental Needs
12 Mo
Typical Loss Of Rent Limit
33-1366
The Rent Rule To Know
15 min
To a Real Quote
The Quick Answer

An Arizona rental needs a landlord policy, also called a DP-3 dwelling fire policy, not homeowners insurance. Filing a homeowners claim on a tenant-occupied property can be investigated and denied. Expect to pay roughly 15 to 25 percent more than a homeowners policy on the same house, in exchange for three things a homeowners policy will not do: cover the dwelling as a rental, cover landlord liability, and replace lost rent when a covered loss makes the unit uninhabitable. The rule to know is ARS 33-1366: fire or casualty that substantially impairs enjoyment lets a tenant terminate on 14 days' written notice, or take a rent reduction proportional to the unusable part. Arizona has no statute discharging rent during an evacuation alone — but an evacuated, undamaged rental still stops paying while the mortgage doesn't, and civil authority coverage is what bridges that. Tenant belongings are never covered, so require renters insurance and be named as additional interest. Raquel Jimenez Insurance in Tucson quotes rental property free at (520) 889-5766.

Right policy
DP-3 landlord, not homeowners
Typical cost
15 to 25% above homeowners
Never covered
Tenant belongings, unpaid rent
Free quotes
(520) 889-5766
Arizona Landlord Insurance, The Short Version

The most expensive mistake is the quietest one. Wrong policy, right property.

It happens like this. You bought the place, lived in it, insured it as a home or a condo. Then you moved, kept it, and rented it out. The policy renewed automatically every year, so nobody thought about it. Now a pipe bursts, you file a claim, and the adjuster asks who has been living here.

A homeowners policy is written for a home you occupy. Once tenants live there, the carrier can investigate occupancy and deny the claim. Years of premiums, no coverage, and it is entirely avoidable with one phone call. If you are renting out a property that is still on a homeowners policy, stop reading and call us. That is the whole point of this page and everything below is detail.

The right policy is a landlord policy, technically a dwelling fire or DP-3 form. It costs roughly 15 to 25 percent more than homeowners on the same house, and it does three jobs that a homeowners policy does not: it insures the building as a rental, it covers the liability that comes with people living in a property you own, and it replaces the rent when a covered loss puts the unit out of service. That last one is why this policy exists. Your mortgage does not care that the kitchen burned.

Then there is the part almost nobody reads until they need it: what actually happens to your rent when fire or an evacuation hits. Arizona's rule is ARS 33-1366, and it is not the rule you will read about in most articles online. It is worth ten minutes of your attention before the next fire season, and it is the first thing we look at on a rental in this state.

What a landlord policy covers. And what lands back on you.

Three coverages do the real work: the building, the liability, and the rent. The exclusions are where landlords get surprised.

Core
Rebuild Cost

Dwelling

The structure, at what it costs to rebuild today rather than what the property would sell for. Take replacement cost over actual cash value: a fire that destroys a twenty-year-old roof should buy you a new roof, not a depreciated fraction of one.

Core
$500k+

Landlord Liability

The broken stair rail, the slip on the walkway, the dog the tenant was not supposed to have. Covers defense costs as well as the judgment. Start at $500,000 and put an umbrella on top, because rental property attracts claims that owner-occupied homes do not.

Core
12 Months

Loss of Rent

Replaces rental income while a covered loss makes the unit uninhabitable, usually up to about twelve months of fair rental value. Match the limit to a realistic Arizona repair timeline, which is longer than you would like.

Worth adding
Civil Authority

Civil Authority

Responds when a government order blocks access to the property — the one thing standing between an evacuation order and an unpaid mortgage when your rental was never physically touched. Carries time limits and conditions. Read it before fire season.

Worth adding
Vacancy

Vacancy Endorsement

Most policies restrict coverage once a property sits empty past roughly 30 to 60 days, and vandalism and water damage are often the first things excluded. Turnover and renovations are normal. Tell us and we will keep the coverage intact.

Worth adding
Your Stuff

Landlord Property

The appliances, the washer and dryer, the furniture in a furnished unit, the lawn equipment in the garage. It is your property, not the tenant's, and standard limits are thin. Worth sizing on purpose.

Not covered
Their Stuff

Tenant Belongings

Never covered, and it should not be. That is what renters insurance is for. Require it in the lease, ask to be added as additional interest, and verify it at renewal.

Not covered
Bad Tenants

Unpaid Rent & Evictions

A tenant who stops paying is a legal problem, not a claim. Loss of rent responds to covered physical damage, not to a bad tenancy. Eviction costs and rent you never collected are not on the policy.

Not covered
Quake & Flood

Earthquake & Flood

Both excluded, both written separately. Flood is the one that actually bites here: monsoon flash flooding and wash overflow are not covered by a standard landlord policy, and much of Tucson sits outside a mapped flood zone where owners assume they are fine. Earthquake is a real but low exposure in Southern Arizona and is written as a private endorsement, since Arizona has no state earthquake authority.

Renting out a place that is still on a homeowners policy?

It is the most common gap we find, and the most expensive one. Fixing it takes one call, and it is the difference between a paid claim and a denied one.

The Rule Most Articles Get Wrong

What actually stops the rent. And what your policy does about it.

This is the part of the page worth reading twice, because most of what you will find online about landlords, evacuations and rent is about a different state.

What Arizona law actually does

Start with what Arizona does not have. There is no Arizona statute that discharges a tenant's rent during a mandatory evacuation order. Several states have passed laws like that, California most recently, and those articles travel a long way. If you have read that an evacuation order automatically stops your rent and you have ten days to hand back what was prepaid, that is not Arizona law and it does not apply to your rental in Pima County.

What Arizona has is ARS 33-1366, and its trigger is damage, not an order. If the unit is damaged or destroyed by fire or casualty to an extent that substantially impairs enjoyment, your tenant has two options: vacate immediately and notify you in writing within 14 days of their intent to terminate, in which case the lease ends as of the date they vacated; or, if continued occupancy is lawful, vacate only the unusable part, in which case their rent is reduced in proportion to the lost fair rental value. If the lease terminates, you return the security deposit recoverable under ARS 33-1321, and rent is accounted for as of the date they vacated.

Where that leaves your coverage

Here is the good news, and it is genuinely good: Arizona's rent rule and your insurance policy key off the same thing. Standard loss of rent coverage triggers on direct physical damage from a covered peril. ARS 33-1366 also triggers on physical damage. In states with an evacuation statute, the law and the policy fire on different events and a gap opens between them. In Arizona they line up.

Now the part that still needs attention. Picture a fire in the hills. Your rental is evacuated for three weeks and never burns. Arizona law does not discharge the rent, but that is cold comfort at the practical level: your tenant is displaced, may not pay, and nothing was physically damaged, so loss of rent may never trigger either. The mortgage is still due on the first. And watch the proportional reduction in 33-1366 — smoke or partial damage that makes half a unit unusable cuts the rent without necessarily rising to a full loss.

What bridges it

Civil authority coverage is the piece designed for the evacuated-but-undamaged case: it responds when a government order prevents access to the property. It is not automatic, it is not unlimited, and it usually comes with a time limit and conditions about how close the damage has to be. Whether your policy has it, and how it is written, is a question with a real dollar answer.

That is the whole reason to read your policy in July instead of October. Send us the declarations page and we will tell you what you actually have, whether it can be improved, and what it costs. On the tenant-law side of ARS 33-1366, talk to a landlord-tenant attorney, because we are insurance people and that is not our lane.

Does your policy cover an evacuation that never touches the building?

It is a fifteen-minute read of your declarations page and it is free. Better to know in July than to find out in October.

Seven ways to protect the return. Not just the building.

A rental is a business, so the goal is not the cheapest premium. It is the best after-tax cost of risk, and those are different numbers.

1

Require renters insurance, then actually verify it

Put a minimum liability limit in the lease, ask to be added as additional interest so you are told when it lapses, and check at each renewal. A tenant with their own coverage means their loss goes to their carrier instead of becoming your liability claim. We are happy to quote your tenants directly.

2

Buy the umbrella. It is the cheapest thing on the page.

Rental property attracts liability the way owner-occupied homes do not. An umbrella stacks $1 million or more across your rentals, your home, and your auto for a few hundred dollars a year. Measured per dollar of protection, nothing else comes close.

3

Take a real deductible, because you are a business

You should not be filing small claims on a rental anyway: claims history follows the property and drives both price and whether carriers will write you at all. Set the deductible where it belongs and self-insure the small stuff on purpose.

4

Bundle the rentals with your own policies

Multiple properties with one carrier, plus your home and auto, is where the real discount lives. It also means one person can see your whole exposure instead of four people each seeing a slice of it.

5

Harden the property and claim the credits

Arizona's wildfire mitigation rules require insurers to discount for specific work: Class A roof, ember-resistant vents, five feet of noncombustible space at the foundation, defensible space. On a rental it does double duty, lowering the premium and keeping the property insurable at all.

6

Tell us when the use changes

Long-term lease became a short-term rental. Tenant moved out and it is vacant for four months. You added an ADU and rented that too. Every one of those changes the policy, and every one is a denied claim if we hear about it after the fact instead of before.

7

Remember the premium is deductible

Insurance on a rental is generally a deductible business expense, so the after-tax cost is lower than the invoice. That is worth remembering before you cut coverage to save a few dollars a month. Confirm the details with your CPA, since we do insurance and they do taxes.

However you landlord. We write it.

One condo, a duplex, the house you moved out of, the ADU in the back. Each is a different policy conversation.

One door or a dozen, the review is free.

Tell us what you own and how it is rented. We will tell you what the policy should be, what it costs, and what is currently exposed.

Landlord insurance in Tucson. And across Arizona.

Rental property is priced ZIP by ZIP, and so is whether a carrier will write it at all. Tell us where the door is.

Arizona landlord insurance questions. Straight answers.

I already have homeowners insurance on the property. Isn't that enough?

No, and this is the mistake that voids claims. A homeowners policy (HO-3) is written for a home you live in. A rental needs a landlord policy, also called a dwelling fire or DP-3 policy.

If you file a claim on a homeowners policy for a property tenants occupy, the carrier can investigate, confirm the tenancy, and deny it. You will have paid premiums for years for coverage that does not respond. If you moved out and rented the place without telling your agent, call today. This is a fifteen-minute fix now and a catastrophe later.

Is landlord insurance required in Arizona?

No Arizona law requires it. Your lender almost certainly does, and if you let it lapse they can force-place coverage that is more expensive and protects only them.

The real answer is that it is not optional in any practical sense. You are holding a high-value asset, exposed to the liability that comes with people living in it, and depending on the rent as income. Those are three separate reasons, and the policy covers all three.

How much does landlord insurance cost in Arizona?

Plan on 15 to 25 percent more than a homeowners policy on the same property, because the risk profile is different: you are not there, tenants change, and the property may sit vacant between them.

The wider range depends almost entirely on wildfire exposure and rebuild cost. A rental in a flat urban ZIP prices very differently from the same house in a foothill area, if a carrier writes the foothill house at all. One thing that helps: premiums on a rental are generally deductible as a business expense, so the after-tax cost is lower than the invoice. Confirm the specifics with your CPA.

What is loss of rent coverage, and how much do I need?

Loss of rent, sometimes called fair rental value, replaces the rental income you lose while a covered loss makes the unit uninhabitable. It is the coverage that separates a landlord policy from a homeowners policy, and in a market with Southern Arizona rents it can be the most valuable line on the page.

It is usually written as a limit tied to about 12 months of rent. Match the months to a realistic repair timeline for your property, not an optimistic one. In Arizona right now, permits and contractors mean a serious rebuild can take well over a year, and your mortgage does not pause while you wait.

Does my policy pay lost rent if my tenants are evacuated but the property is undamaged?

This is the most important question an Arizona landlord can ask right now, and the honest answer is maybe not.

First, rule out the scare story. Arizona has no statute discharging a tenant's rent during a mandatory evacuation order. Some states do — California among them — and those articles circulate widely, but Arizona is not one of them. Arizona's rule is ARS 33-1366: if fire or casualty damage substantially impairs enjoyment of the unit, the tenant may vacate and terminate on written notice within 14 days, or vacate the unusable part and pay rent reduced in proportion to the lost fair rental value. The trigger is damage — the same trigger as loss of rent coverage — so in Arizona the law and the policy line up.

Where it still gets thin is the evacuated-but-undamaged rental: nobody's paying, nothing was hurt, and loss of rent may never trigger. Civil authority coverage is the bridge — it responds when a government order blocks access — though it carries its own time limits and conditions. Worth reading on your specific policy before fire season rather than after. Bring us your declarations page and we will look. We are not attorneys, so for the tenant-law side talk to a landlord-tenant lawyer.

Does landlord insurance cover my tenant's belongings?

No, and it should not. Your policy covers your building, your liability, and your rental income. Your tenant's furniture, electronics, and clothes are their responsibility, which is what renters insurance is for.

This matters to you more than it looks. When a tenant with no coverage loses everything in a fire, the pressure to make them whole lands on you and often ends up as a claim against your liability coverage. A tenant with their own policy has their own carrier handling their own loss.

Can I require my tenants to carry renters insurance?

Yes, and you should. Landlords in Arizona are allowed to set reasonable lease terms, and requiring renters insurance is standard practice for property managers here.

Ask for two things in the lease: a minimum liability limit, commonly $100,000 to $300,000, and your name added as an additional interest so you are notified if the policy lapses. Then actually verify it at renewal. A requirement nobody checks is a requirement nobody keeps. We can quote your tenants directly if that makes it easier.

Does landlord insurance cover damage caused by tenants?

It depends on the damage. Sudden and accidental damage is generally covered, so a tenant's overflowing tub or a kitchen fire is a normal claim. Malicious damage and vandalism are typically covered on a DP-3 form as well.

What is never covered is wear and tear: worn carpet, scuffed walls, a tired dishwasher, the accumulated cost of people living somewhere. That is what security deposits and maintenance budgets are for. Insurance covers events, not depreciation.

Does landlord insurance cover unpaid rent or eviction costs?

No. If a tenant stops paying, that is a business and legal problem, not an insurance claim. Loss of rent only responds when a covered physical loss makes the unit uninhabitable, not when a tenant simply does not pay.

Eviction costs, legal fees for a rent dispute, and the rent you never collected are not on the policy. There are specialty products in this area, and there are landlord-tenant attorneys, but do not walk into a lease assuming your insurance is a backstop for a bad tenancy.

I rent it on Airbnb. Am I covered?

Probably not under a standard landlord policy. Most are written for long-term tenancies and exclude or limit rentals under 30 days. Short-term rental is closer to a hospitality business than a lease, and it gets underwritten accordingly.

If you host short-term, say so up front. There are specific programs for it, and the platform's own host protection is not a substitute for a policy. What you do not want is a claim denied because your policy described a use that stopped being true two years ago.

What happens if the property sits vacant between tenants?

Watch this one. Most policies restrict coverage once a property is vacant beyond a set period, often around 30 to 60 days, and some perils like vandalism and water damage can be excluded entirely once vacancy kicks in.

If you are between tenants, renovating, or holding a unit off market, tell us. A vacancy permit or endorsement keeps the coverage intact for the gap. Turnover is normal. A denied claim during turnover is not.

Do I need earthquake, flood, or an umbrella on a rental?

Earthquake and flood are excluded from every standard landlord policy and written separately. In Arizona the one to take seriously is flood: monsoon flash flooding and wash overflow do real damage, and a standard policy pays for none of it. Plenty of Tucson-area rentals sit outside a mapped flood zone, which lowers the premium but not the risk. Earthquake exposure in Southern Arizona is low but not zero; there is no state earthquake authority here, so it is written as a private endorsement, and deductibles are set as a percentage of the dwelling limit rather than a flat dollar amount.

The umbrella is a different story: it is the easiest yes on this page. Rental property is a liability magnet, and an umbrella adds $1 million or more across your rentals, your home, and your auto for a few hundred dollars a year. If you own rental property in this county, you have assets a plaintiff's attorney can find.

Still have questions? Call (520) 889-5766. We will give you a straight answer.
A rental property in Tucson, Arizona

Protect the building, the liability, and the rent.
Free, fast, and in plain English.

Tell us about the property and how it is rented. We will build the policy around the investment and quote it in about 15 minutes.