Short-Term Rental & Host Protections
Hosting on Airbnb, VRBO or similar platforms adds extra exposure. Platform protections help — but they often leave gaps. This guide explains what host protection programs cover, common exclusions, recommended endorsements, and practical steps to reduce risk and lower premiums.
Platform host protection: what it is — and what it isn’t
Most short-term rental platforms offer a host protection program or host guarantee that provides limited liability or property damage coverage. These are intended as supplemental protections, not full insurance replacements.
Typical platform protections
- Host liability coverage: third-party bodily injury and property damage up to a capped limit (e.g., $1M) — subject to exclusions and documentation requirements.
- Host damage reimbursement: reimbursement for guest-caused damage, often limited and with many exclusions.
- Short claims window: platforms require fast claims, proof, and often prefer to resolve disputes off-platform first.
Common limitations & exclusions
- Commercial activity, business income, or event hosting may be excluded.
- Damage to shared spaces or intentional acts can be excluded.
- Coverage limits may be lower than needed for full rebuilds or liability suits.
- Platforms may deny coverage if host failed to disclose material facts or follow local laws.
Recommended insurance for hosts
Tell your insurer about hosting and choose one of these approaches:
- Short-term rental endorsement — adds host liability, property damage, and sometimes loss of income to your homeowner policy.
- Dwelling/landlord policy — for homes primarily used as rentals (longer-term hosting).
- Commercial or hybrid host policy — for high-volume hosts, multiple units, or properties used for events.
- Standalone contents insurance — covers guest damage to personal property inside the unit (useful for furnished rentals).
Loss of income & business interruption
Consider options that replace lost rental income if the property becomes uninhabitable after a covered loss. NFIP (flood) rarely includes ALE for short-term rentals; private carriers sometimes offer it as an add-on.
Practical host risk-reduction checklist
- Maintain accurate records of bookings, guest IDs, and communications.
- Use a professionally written rental agreement with house rules and maximum occupancy clauses.
- Install smoke/CO detectors, smart locks, property cameras in common exterior areas, and water sensors.
- Require security deposits and use platform damage claim processes promptly.
- Limit or prohibit high-risk activities (parties, events) in your listing and add clear penalties.
Local rules, short-term rental registration & taxes
Many cities require registration, transient occupancy tax collection, safety inspections, or limits on short-term rentals. Noncompliance can void insurance coverage — always research local regulations and include compliance steps in your hosting process.
Claims: best practices for hosts
- Collect evidence immediately: photos, messages, invoices, police reports if needed.
- Notify your insurer and the platform as soon as possible.
- Preserve damaged items and document their condition for adjusters.
- Keep records of repair estimates and guest communications.
When to consider commercial underwriting
If you host multiple properties, exceed X nights per year (varies by insurer), or list for events and experiences, you may need commercial-grade coverage. Underwriting may look at revenue, guest screening, safety procedures, and property managers in place.
Host FAQs
- Does the platform’s host guarantee cover everything?
- No — host guarantees often have limits, exclusions for negligence, or activities like events. Treat them as secondary to a proper insurance policy.
- Will insurers raise my premium if I list my home?
- Possibly. Undisclosed hosting can lead to denied claims or cancellation. Disclosing and purchasing an appropriate endorsement is the safe path and may keep premiums reasonable.
- Can I insure loss of bookings due to cancellations?
- Some specialty insurers offer rental income protection for covered perils; standard homeowners policies do not cover market cancellations or guest no-shows.
