Long Island has thousands of landlords — from families renting out a second home to investors managing multiple multi-family properties. What they all have in common is significant exposure that standard insurance simply doesn't address. The Vanderbeck Agency specializes in landlord insurance that actually matches the realities of Long Island's rental market: high property values, coastal exposure, dense neighborhoods, and tenants who may or may not carry their own insurance.
What Is Landlord Insurance (DP-3)?
Landlord insurance — also called a dwelling policy or DP-3 — is a specialized property insurance product designed for properties you rent to others. It's distinctly different from a homeowners policy, and using the wrong type of coverage can result in denied claims when you need protection most.
A DP-3 is the gold standard for rental properties, offering open-peril coverage (meaning everything is covered unless specifically excluded) and critical protections that homeowners policies simply don't provide — like rental income loss and landlord liability.
If you're renting out a property that's still insured under a standard homeowners (HO-3) policy, your insurer can deny claims because the property is no longer owner-occupied. Long Island landlords who discover this gap only after a loss face significant uninsured losses. Contact us immediately to review your coverage.
Landlord Insurance Coverage Types
The single best thing you can do as a Long Island landlord is require every tenant to carry renters insurance. It reduces disputes over minor property damage, prevents tenants from seeking compensation from your policy for their own belongings, and demonstrates financial responsibility. We can provide you with a landlord letter for your lease.
Multi-Family Rental Properties on Long Island
Long Island has one of the highest concentrations of two-family (duplex) and small multi-family rental properties in New York State — particularly in Nassau County communities like Hempstead, Freeport, and Valley Stream, and throughout older Suffolk County neighborhoods.
Multi-family rental properties have distinct insurance considerations:
- Two-family homes where owner occupies one unit: You may be eligible for a modified homeowners policy rather than a commercial policy — but the policy must acknowledge the rental unit. We ensure the right policy type is in place.
- 3–4 unit residential rental properties: Typically require a DP-3 or small commercial landlord policy. We have access to Allstate's commercial lines for these properties.
- Umbrella liability coverage: We strongly recommend a personal umbrella policy of $1–$2 million for any Long Island landlord with multiple properties, given the significant liability exposure.
Long Island Rental Property Market — Coverage Considerations
Long Island's rental market creates specific risks and opportunities that your landlord insurance must address:
- High property values: Long Island home values are among the highest in New York State. Underinsuring your dwelling coverage is a significant risk — we run replacement cost calculations on every property.
- Coastal and flood exposure: Rental properties near the water face additional flood and wind risk. Separate flood policies are often necessary — and may be required by your mortgage lender.
- Vacancy coverage: Properties vacant between tenancies have higher loss risk (vandalism, undetected water leaks) and require specific vacancy provisions in your policy.
- Lead paint exposure: Many older Long Island rental properties contain lead paint. We ensure your liability coverage adequately addresses lead paint disclosure claims.
Protect your Long Island rental investment.
Get a landlord insurance quote tailored to your property, your tenants, and your risk profile.
Frequently Asked Questions — Landlord Insurance Long Island
Landlord insurance (DP-3 dwelling policy) is specifically designed for properties you rent to others. Unlike a homeowners policy, it provides rental income coverage, landlord liability protection, and coverage for tenant-caused damage. If you're renting a property on Long Island under a standard homeowners policy, you may be uninsured for your most significant rental-related losses.
No — and this is a critical distinction. Standard homeowners policies require owner occupancy. If you're renting out the property full-time, most insurers can deny claims because of the material change in risk (a tenant presents higher risk than an owner-occupant). Many Long Island landlords discover this only after a major loss. Contact us to review any existing policies on rental properties immediately.
Landlord insurance on Long Island typically costs $1,600–$3,500 per year for a single-family rental home — roughly 15–25% more than a comparable homeowners policy, reflecting the additional risks associated with rental use. Multi-family properties and those in coastal or flood zones will be higher. We provide competitive quotes and can bundle with your other policies.
A DP-3 policy covers vandalism and malicious damage by tenants. However, normal wear-and-tear or intentional damage is generally a lease security deposit matter, not an insurance claim. We advise every Long Island landlord to collect adequate security deposits and document property condition at move-in with photos — this protects both you and the tenant.
Yes — strongly recommended. Requiring renters insurance keeps tenants from looking to your policy for losses that should be their responsibility, reduces dispute frequency, and indicates financially responsible tenants. We can provide you with a standard landlord letter for your lease requiring proof of renters insurance. The Vanderbeck Agency can also provide renters insurance to your tenants directly.
Is your Long Island rental property properly insured?
Find out in 60 seconds. Free consultation, no obligation, local experts who know Long Island's rental market.