Compare Renters Insurance for Brandon Apartments & Multi-Family Homes
Brandon is a community where many residents rent—local data shows a significant portion of homes are renter-occupied—so leases often require proof of renters insurance. We’ll size Replacement Cost for your belongings, add personal liability and loss of use (ALE), and handle landlord certificate wording.
Why Brandon Renters Need HO-4 Coverage
Your landlord’s policy won’t cover your belongings or your liability. The building is insured by the owner; your **renters policy** protects your property, your personal liability, and provides a buffer for temporary housing if a covered loss forces you out. The NAIC’s consumer guidance is clear on this point.
Local reality: Brandon leases commonly require proof of renters insurance and a named landlord/manager. The City also has requirements for rental properties—good to know when you’re moving in.
What Your Brandon Renters Policy Can Include
Personal Property (Contents)
- Replacement Cost on belongings (vs ACV depreciation)
- Electronics, furniture, clothing—on and (within limits) off-premises
- Scheduled items for jewelry, fine arts, collectibles
Standard perils include fire/smoke, theft, vandalism, windstorm, and sudden water damage (not flood).
Personal Liability & MedPay
- $300k–$500k typical; higher limits available
- Medical payments to others regardless of fault (limit varies)
- Add a Personal Umbrella for $1M–$10M extra protection
Loss of Use (ALE)
- Hotel/rental & extra costs if a covered loss makes your home uninhabitable
- Critical after fires, burst pipes, or neighbor overflows
ALE follows the HO-4’s covered perils—not civil/lease disputes.
Popular Add-Ons
- Water Backup (sump/sewer backup) for your contents
- Identity Theft expense
- Earthquake (available via endorsement/standalone)
- Equipment Breakdown for covered home systems (varies by carrier)
Basement Apartments & Flood: What to Know
Standard renters policies **exclude flood**. If your apartment is at/below grade—common in some Brandon buildings—check your address on FEMA’s Flood Map Service Center and Colorado’s flood tools. If risk is present, we’ll quote **contents-only flood insurance** (NFIP or private).