Most renters skip renters insurance because they assume their belongings are not worth much. The average renter owns $20,000 to $30,000 in personal property when everything is counted. A single break-in, apartment fire, or burst pipe can wipe that out overnight. Choosing the right coverage amount takes about five minutes and prevents a painful gap when you actually need to file a claim.
Step 1: Take a Home Inventory
Walk through every room and list what you own. The goal is to estimate the total replacement value of your belongings — what it would cost to buy everything new at today’s prices, not what you originally paid for it.
Common items renters undercount:
- Electronics: laptop, TV, gaming console, tablets, headphones, speakers
- Clothing and shoes: add up a full wardrobe including work clothes, coats, and athletic gear
- Furniture: couch, bed frame, mattress, dining table, desks
- Kitchen items: small appliances, cookware, dishes
- Jewelry and watches
- Musical instruments, sporting equipment, bikes
A spreadsheet works well for this. Many renters are surprised to find their total exceeds $25,000 once everything is listed.
How Much Personal Property Coverage Do You Need?
Most renters insurance policies offer personal property coverage in amounts ranging from $10,000 to $100,000. The most common choices are $20,000, $30,000, and $50,000.
- $20,000: A reasonable minimum for a furnished studio or one-bedroom apartment with basic electronics.
- $30,000: Appropriate for most one- or two-bedroom renters with a full electronics setup and standard furniture.
- $50,000 or more: Necessary if you own high-end electronics, significant jewelry, musical instruments, bicycles, or other valuables.
The cost difference between $20,000 and $50,000 in coverage is typically $5 to $10 per month. This is not the place to cut corners.
How Much Liability Coverage Do You Need?
Standard renters insurance policies include $100,000 in liability coverage. This pays for medical bills or legal costs if someone is injured in your apartment, or if you accidentally cause damage to a neighbor’s property — for example, a bathtub overflow that floods the unit below.
$100,000 is usually sufficient for most renters. Consider increasing to $300,000 if you:
- Host frequent gatherings at your home
- Have a dog (especially a larger breed)
- Have significant assets to protect
- Want extra peace of mind against lawsuits
Increasing liability from $100,000 to $300,000 typically adds only $2 to $5 per month.
Loss of Use Coverage
Loss of use coverage (also called additional living expenses) pays for a hotel, food, and other costs if your apartment becomes uninhabitable after a covered loss — fire, smoke damage, or severe water damage, for example. Most policies set this at 20% to 30% of your personal property coverage amount.
On a $30,000 property policy, that is $6,000 to $9,000 in loss-of-use coverage. This is usually adequate for a few weeks in temporary housing, but if you live in a high-cost city, consider a policy with a higher loss-of-use limit.
What Renters Insurance Does Not Cover
Understanding the gaps prevents unpleasant surprises after a loss:
- Flooding: Standard renters insurance does not cover flood damage. You need a separate flood insurance policy if you live in a flood-prone area.
- Earthquakes: Not covered in standard policies. Separate earthquake endorsements are available in high-risk areas.
- Your car: Belongings stolen from your car may be covered (check your policy), but the car itself is covered under auto insurance.
- Roommate’s belongings: Your policy covers you and resident relatives, not roommates. Each person in a shared apartment should carry their own policy.
- Business equipment: If you run a business from home, specialized business property coverage may be needed.
High-Value Items: When to Add a Rider
Standard renters insurance policies impose sub-limits on certain categories of valuables — typically $1,500 to $2,500 for jewelry, $1,500 for electronics, and similar caps for cameras, firearms, and instruments. If any individual item is worth more than these limits, add a scheduled personal property endorsement (also called a rider or floater). This insures the item for its full appraised value, often with no deductible.
An engagement ring worth $5,000 will only be covered up to $1,500 without a rider. A $3,000 camera will face the same problem. Riders typically cost 1% to 2% of the item’s value annually — about $50 to $100 per year for a $5,000 ring.
Actual Cash Value vs. Replacement Cost: Choose Carefully
This is the most important coverage decision renters make. Actual cash value (ACV) policies pay the depreciated value of your belongings at the time of loss. A five-year-old laptop that cost $1,200 might only pay out $400 under ACV. Replacement cost value (RCV) policies pay what it actually costs to replace the item with a comparable new one today.
RCV coverage typically adds $5 to $15 per month to your premium. For renters with a significant amount of electronics, furniture, or appliances, it is almost always worth the difference.
Bottom Line
Start with a home inventory, calculate your total replacement cost, and choose a personal property coverage amount that covers that number. Add $300,000 in liability if you host guests or have a dog. Opt for replacement cost coverage. The total annual cost for solid renters insurance coverage is usually under $250 — a bargain for the protection it provides.