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More advice needed on patchy insurance

By Staff Reporter
22 September 2014 | 10 minute read

With sub-standard landlord insurance policies rife in the market, it is a key area in which property managers can help investors identify the potential pitfalls of cheap deals.

Landlords who choose insurance on price alone risk making a costly mistake, according to EBM RentCover.

RentCover general manager Sharon Fox-Slater said cheap landlord insurance could leave property investors exposed.

“Unfortunately, there are a lot of sub-standard policies on the market, and property managers can help investors by alerting them to that fact and the importance of doing their research,” she said.

“For example, some policies will only cover malicious damage by a tenant, yet a lot of tenant-related damage is not classed as malicious, so you need a policy that includes both accidental and malicious damage to minimise the risk of being left uncovered.”

Other common shortcomings were service levels that didn’t live up to the glossy brochures, excluding fires deliberately lit by tenants and high excesses.

“Some policies don’t cover the landlord if the lease has ended and the tenant is staying on a month-to-month basis – so from a property manager's viewpoint that’s worth checking with your landlord if you have a property in that situation,” Ms Fox-Slater said.

“The other situation that some policies cover and others don’t is arrears – some policies won’t pay out if a tenant has been behind in their rent at any time during the two months that precede arranging the policy.”

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Ms Fox-Slater said unfortunately property owners were not always aware they weren’t covered for certain risks until they made a claim. 

“It’s a common misconception among landlords that they don’t need insurance if they’ve got a professional property manager. Using a professional does help reduce the risks, but it doesn’t eliminate them – things can and do go wrong, as all property managers know,” she said.

“The other area where landlords go wrong is the happy illusion they don’t need insurance because the body corporate or strata covers it. In fact, that insurance covers only common property and common areas.

“The body corporate’s insurance does not cover the fixtures and fittings inside the landlord’s four walls, nor liability for incidents that happen within them – let alone tenant-related risks such as tenant default or malicious damage,” she added.

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