Landlord Insurance • Texas • DP-3 • 2026

Texas Landlord Insurance (2026): DP-3 Coverage, Wind/Hail Deductibles, STR Options, and Liability That Holds Up

Texas landlord insurance comparison for 2026 with DP-3 coverage and deductible strategy

If you’re searching for landlord insurance near me in Texas, you’re usually trying to solve a very specific problem: protect the structure, protect the rent stream, and protect yourself from liability—while understanding the deductibles that actually apply when storms hit. In 2026, Texas landlord coverage is won or lost on the details: policy form (DP-1 vs DP-2 vs DP-3), roof settlement (replacement cost vs actual cash value), and storm deductibles (flat-dollar vs percentage).

This guide is built for real-world rental owners—single-family rentals, duplexes, small multi-units, and furnished rentals—who want a clean comparison without guesswork. We start with a consistent baseline, then layer in Texas-specific risk notes like wind/hail deductibles, named-storm or hurricane deductibles in certain areas, water loss controls, and vacancy rules that can change coverage if a property sits empty. When you’re ready, use the secure quote link to see live options and pricing.

Compare Texas landlord quotes on a clean baseline (DP forms, deductibles, endorsements)

Policy forms: DP-1 vs DP-2 vs DP-3 (why DP-3 is the anchor in Texas)

The form is the foundation. A landlord policy can look “cheap” because the coverage trigger is narrow, the settlement method is ACV, or key perils are treated differently than you assume. DP-3 is commonly the go-to for eligible rentals because it’s built to protect the dwelling more broadly—then you refine the policy with deductibles and endorsements that match Texas storm reality.

Texas landlord policy forms (2026): quick comparison
Form Perils basis Dwelling settlement Often fits Watch-outs
DP-1 Named perils (basic) Often ACV Budget-driven or eligibility-limited risks Narrow triggers; ACV settlement can create large out-of-pocket costs after roof losses
DP-2 Expanded named perils ACV or RC (varies) Middle-ground rentals with stable occupancy Confirm theft/vandalism rules and how certain water losses are treated
DP-3 Broader dwelling protection (exclusions apply) Often RC for eligible risks Most Texas long-term rentals when eligible Vacancy clauses, roof settlement language, storm deductibles by ZIP

The right form is step one. Step two is aligning deductibles and endorsements to your ZIP, roof type, and rental operations—so your quote is both accurate and bindable.

Coverage snapshot: what to compare on every Texas landlord quote

Apples-to-apples quoting only works if the baseline is identical: same dwelling limit approach, same deductibles (including wind/hail), same loss-of-rents selection, and the same liability limits. Use this table as your “comparison checklist” and keep it consistent across quotes.

Texas landlord coverage snapshot (2026): what each part does
Coverage What it protects Common rental triggers Detail that matters
Dwelling (Coverage A) Structure and attached features Fire, storm damage, sudden covered events Replacement cost vs ACV and roof settlement language
Other Structures Fences, detached garage, sheds Wind damage, falling objects, fire Limit adequacy (fences add up fast)
Landlord Personal Property Owner-provided appliances/furnishings Furnished rentals and mid-term setups Sublimits and what’s considered “property of the landlord”
Loss of Rents Rental income during covered repairs Uninhabitable unit after covered loss Time limits, waiting periods, and realistic repair timelines
Premises Liability Defense and damages if you’re liable Slip/fall, pool incidents, property hazards Limit strategy and umbrella alignment
Medical Payments Small no-fault injury payments Minor injuries on premises Useful for small incidents, not a substitute for liability limits

Texas storm deductibles: the part that changes what you pay after a loss

In many Texas ZIP codes, storm-related losses can use a different deductible than your standard “all-peril” deductible. That’s not a small technicality—your deductible decides whether a roof claim is actually payable or effectively self-funded. Before you bind, confirm the deductible type and how it’s calculated for your property.

Deductible types to verify on Texas landlord insurance (2026)
Deductible type How it’s calculated Most common when Why it matters
All-peril (standard) Flat dollar amount Non-storm losses Sets your baseline out-of-pocket for many claims
Wind/Hail Flat or percentage of Coverage A Hail and wind-prone regions A 1%–2% deductible can be thousands on a typical dwelling limit
Named Storm / Hurricane Often percentage of Coverage A Some coastal and storm-exposed areas Can apply when storms are officially classified; confirm triggers and percentages
Water loss restrictions Not always a deductible—often limitations Older plumbing or loss history Know what’s limited vs excluded, and use endorsements where available
Deductible strategy Choose a storm deductible you can actually fund. The cheapest premium often shifts risk to you via percentage deductibles.
Roof settlement clarity Replacement cost and ACV can change your check materially. Verify the roof settlement approach before you compare prices.

Texas landlord endorsements: close the gaps landlords actually run into

Most rental-policy pain comes from missing endorsements: backup water events, service lines, equipment breakdown, or vacancy transitions. Add-ons should be selected to match the property’s age, HVAC load, plumbing, and occupancy plan.

Common Texas landlord endorsements (2026): what they solve
Endorsement What it helps with Best for Common mistake
Water backup Backup from drains/sumps Older properties, multi-units, basements where applicable Assuming flood and backup are the same
Service line Underground pipe/wire damage Vintage lines or higher repair-cost areas Not verifying what lines are included
Equipment breakdown Electrical/mechanical failures Rentals where you provide HVAC/appliances Treating it like routine maintenance coverage
Ordinance or law Code upgrade costs after a covered loss Older homes, remodels, additions Assuming code upgrades are automatically covered
Vandalism / theft enhancements Better coverage clarity for rental scenarios Higher turnover or more vacancy transitions Ignoring vacancy rules and time triggers
Umbrella (separate policy) Extra liability above landlord and auto Multiple rentals, pools, higher foot traffic Buying higher landlord liability but skipping umbrella scaling
Quote actions

We compare policies on the same baseline so your final decision is real—not “cheap on paper.”

Long-term vs furnished mid-term vs short-term rentals: insure the real occupancy

The fastest way to create a coverage gap is to insure a property as standard tenant-occupied when it’s actually furnished, turned over frequently, or used for short-term stays. In Texas, occupancy and turnover affect underwriting, eligibility, and claim expectations—so disclose the plan up front and match the form to the use.

Rental type planning (Texas • 2026): what to match in the policy
Rental type Typical stay Policy focus Common add-ons
Long-term lease 6–12 months+ DP-3 when eligible, stable baselines, clear loss-of-rents Water backup, service line, liability strategy
Furnished mid-term 30–90+ days Higher landlord personal property limits and theft clarity Equipment breakdown, higher personal property
Short-term rental (STR) Nights to weeks STR endorsements or specialized coverage may be required Enhanced liability and income protection alignment

Tenant belongings are not covered by landlord insurance. If you want fewer disputes, require tenants to carry renters insurance in the lease.

Claim-ready landlord insurance: the Texas checklist that protects your time and cash flow

Many “denied” or “low payout” claims are really documentation problems, deductible problems, or mismatch problems (wrong occupancy, wrong form, missing endorsement). A claim-ready rental file keeps repairs moving and reduces friction when you need loss-of-rents support.

Document condition Move-in photos/video, inspection notes, and maintenance logs support pre-loss condition.
Track upgrades Keep receipts for roofs, plumbing, HVAC, electrical, and remodels—these affect eligibility and valuation.
Know your storm deductible If the wind/hail deductible is percentage-based, plan cash reserves accordingly.
Vacancy awareness If the property will sit empty, confirm vacancy rules so the policy still matches reality.

Texas landlord insurance support: cities and metro areas

We help Texas rental owners compare coverage baselines and deductible strategies across major metros and surrounding communities. Pricing and eligibility vary by ZIP, roof type, construction, and loss history—so we keep inputs accurate and comparable.

Texas metro clusters we commonly support
Metro / region Examples of nearby cities What we optimize for
Dallas–Fort Worth Plano, Frisco, Irving, Arlington Wind/hail deductibles + roof settlement clarity
Houston Pasadena, Katy, Sugar Land Storm deductible planning + loss-of-rents design
Austin Round Rock, Cedar Park, Pflugerville Form fit + endorsement alignment
San Antonio New Braunfels, Schertz, Converse Baseline-first comparisons + liability scaling
Coastal / Gulf-adjacent Corpus Christi, Galveston, Port Arthur Deductible verification + storm exposure planning
Ready to compare?

Coverage is not bound until you approve final terms and the insurer issues the policy.

Texas landlord insurance FAQs (2026)

Is landlord insurance different from homeowners insurance?

Yes. Homeowners policies are designed for owner-occupied primary residences. Landlord insurance is designed for rentals and typically emphasizes the dwelling, loss of rents, and landlord liability. Insuring a rental on the wrong form can create claim problems when occupancy doesn’t match.

Why do Texas landlord quotes vary so much?

Quotes vary when the baseline isn’t the same: DP form differences, roof settlement differences, and deductible differences (especially wind/hail or named storm deductibles). Make sure you’re comparing identical limits, deductibles, and endorsements before choosing.

Do wind/hail deductibles apply to every claim?

No. Wind/hail deductibles typically apply when the covered damage is caused by wind or hail. Other types of losses usually apply the standard all-peril deductible. The key is verifying which deductible applies to which event in your policy.

Does landlord insurance cover flood damage?

Standard landlord policies typically exclude flood. If you want flood protection, it requires a separate flood policy. Flood and water backup are different coverages with different triggers.

Can I insure short-term rentals (Airbnb/VRBO) on a landlord policy?

Sometimes, but short-term rental use may require an endorsement or specialized coverage. The safest path is to disclose STR use before quoting so the policy form and liability match the real exposure.

Independent agency: Blake Insurance Group LLC is an independent insurance agency and is not affiliated with any single insurance company.

Licensing: Licensed insurance producer (NPN 16944666).

Important: Eligibility, deductibles (including wind/hail and named storm), endorsements, limits, exclusions, and pricing vary by carrier and Texas ZIP code. Your issued policy governs coverage.

Trademarks: All product and company names are trademarks™ or registered® trademarks of their respective holders. Use of them does not imply affiliation or endorsement.

Blake Insurance Group
Call: (888) 387-3687 Email: info@blakeinsurancegroup.com Mon–Fri 9:00–5:00
Blake Nwosu, Owner and Principal Agent
Blake Nwosu Owner & Principal Agent

Expert in personal and commercial insurance, including auto, home, business, health, and life insurance.

License: 16117464

Bio: blakeinsurancegroup.com/blake-nwosu/

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