Can You Get Renters Insurance If You Sublet Your Apartment?
Written by the InsureDiary Editorial Team | Last Updated: May 2026
Most renters assume their insurance policy follows them wherever they go. That assumption is wrong. When you hand over your apartment keys to a subtenant your renters insurance for sublet situations does not automatically extend to cover that new arrangement. The original policy was underwritten based on you occupying the unit. A new person changes the risk profile entirely.
This article walks through exactly what happens to your coverage when you sublet. What you need to do. What your subtenant needs. And where the dangerous gaps live that most people never think about until a claim is denied.
Disclaimer: The information in this article is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, legal, or professional insurance advice. Renters insurance policies, subletting laws, and coverage rules vary significantly by state, city, and insurance provider. Always speak with a licensed insurance professional and review your specific policy documents before making any coverage decisions. For questions or feedback about this content visit our Contact Us page.
What Is Renters Insurance for a Sublet Arrangement?
Renters insurance for a sublet is coverage that protects the original leaseholder and potentially a subtenant when the primary tenant temporarily transfers occupancy of their rental unit to another person. Standard renters insurance policies are written assuming the named insured lives in the unit full time. A sublet changes that assumption.
According to the Insurance Information Institute renters insurance typically covers three things. Personal property losses from covered events like fire or theft. Liability protection if someone is injured in your unit. And additional living expenses if your home becomes temporarily uninhabitable. All three coverage areas get complicated the moment someone else moves in under a sublease.
The core issue is simple. Your insurer agreed to cover you at that address. When someone else lives there and you may no longer be present the terms of that original agreement have changed. Not disclosing this change is the single most common mistake tenants make when subletting.
Is Subletting Legally Allowed? Start Here Before Thinking About Insurance
Check Your Lease First
Before touching your insurance policy you need to know whether subletting is even permitted. Your lease is the controlling document. Look specifically for clauses about assignment and subletting. These are often in the same section.
Some leases prohibit subletting completely. Others require written landlord approval before any subtenant moves in. A small number of leases permit subletting freely but this is uncommon in most US markets.
State Laws That Govern Subletting
State law affects how much power your landlord has to approve or deny a sublet request. Here is what varies across major US states based on current tenant protection laws:
California: Under California Civil Code Section 1995.310 landlords generally cannot unreasonably withhold consent for subletting if the lease is silent on the matter. However most leases are not silent. Landlords can impose insurance requirements as a condition of approval.
New York: New York Real Property Law Section 226-b gives tenants in buildings with four or more units the right to sublet with landlord consent. Landlords cannot unreasonably deny a request but they can require the subtenant to meet certain standards including proof of renters insurance.
Texas: Texas Property Code does not grant automatic subletting rights. Your lease governs. Landlord approval is required unless the lease explicitly allows subletting without it.
Florida: Florida Statute 83.595 allows landlords broad discretion in approving subtenants. Without explicit lease permission you need written landlord consent before proceeding.
Illinois: Illinois law generally requires landlord approval for subletting unless otherwise stated in the lease. Chicago has additional tenant protections under the Residential Landlord and Tenant Ordinance.
Always verify the current law in your state with your state’s department of insurance or a licensed attorney. Laws can change and local ordinances sometimes add additional layers.
Get Landlord Approval in Writing
An email or verbal agreement is not enough. Request a formal written amendment to your lease or a signed sublease agreement. This document should name the subtenant. It should specify start and end dates. It should outline rent obligations and damage responsibilities. And it should confirm that both parties have reviewed the insurance requirements.
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners notes that landlords have the legal right to require tenants and subtenants to carry renters insurance in most states. This right should be addressed directly in any sublease agreement you draft.

How Renters Insurance Works When You Sublet Your Apartment
What Your Existing Policy Actually Covers
Your current renters insurance policy covers you as the named insured. It does not automatically extend to your subtenant. Here is how each coverage type applies once you hand over occupancy:
Personal Property Coverage
Your personal property coverage protects belongings that belong to you. If you move your belongings out of the apartment when you sublet they are likely no longer covered at that address. Most standard renters policies cover personal property at your primary residence. Items stored at another location may only receive limited off-premises coverage. This is typically capped at 10% of your total personal property limit.
If you leave your furniture behind for the subtenant to use that creates an ownership ambiguity. Your subtenant’s policy won’t cover your furniture because they don’t own it. Your policy may question coverage because you’ve transferred use to someone else. Document what you leave behind in writing.
Liability Coverage
Your renters insurance liability coverage was designed to protect you from claims arising from your own negligence. If your subtenant’s guest slips on a wet floor and sues the question of whose liability policy responds becomes complicated.
Your subtenant is not named on your policy. Their actions are not your insured activity. Depending on your policy language your liability coverage might not extend to incidents that occur because of a third party’s negligence even when that third party is living in your insured unit.
Additional Living Expenses
If the apartment becomes uninhabitable due to a covered loss your policy might cover temporary housing costs for you. But if you’re already living elsewhere because you sublet this benefit becomes irrelevant or disputed. Some insurers will deny this benefit entirely if you are not occupying the residence as your primary home.
The Notification Rule: Why You Must Tell Your Insurer
Insurance policies operate on a principle called material representation. You must accurately disclose all material facts about your living situation. Subletting is unambiguously a material fact.
The Insurance Information Institute advises policyholders to review their policy documents carefully and contact their insurer whenever their living situation changes significantly. Subletting qualifies.
Failing to notify your insurer creates two serious risks. First your claim can be denied based on misrepresentation. Second your policy can be voided retroactively meaning coverage never legally existed. Both outcomes leave you personally liable for losses that could run into tens of thousands of dollars.
“Subletting without updating your renters insurance is one of the most common and most costly coverage mistakes American renters make. A five-minute phone call to your insurer can prevent a five-figure out-of-pocket loss.”
— InsureDiary Editorial Team
What Your Subtenant Needs: A Separate Renters Insurance Policy
Why Your Policy Cannot Cover Your Subtenant
Your renters insurance does not cover your subtenant’s personal belongings. It does not cover their liability. It provides them no protection whatsoever. This is true even if they are living in your apartment under a legal sublease.
Your subtenant is a separate legal party. They are not named on your policy. Their belongings are not inventoried in your coverage. If a fire destroys their laptop their clothes and their furniture your insurer will not pay them a dime.
What a Subtenant’s Policy Should Include
Your subtenant should purchase their own standalone renters insurance policy before they move in. A standard renters policy for a subtenant covers:
Personal property protection. Furniture. Electronics. Clothing. Appliances they bring. All covered against fire, theft, vandalism, and other named perils up to their chosen limit.
Liability coverage. If they accidentally cause a fire. If their guest gets injured. If they overflow the bathtub and flood the unit below. Their liability coverage responds and protects them financially.
Additional living expenses. If the unit becomes unlivable due to a covered event they can afford temporary housing elsewhere while repairs are made.
Medical payments to others. Small guest injury claims can be paid without a lawsuit. This often prevents minor incidents from escalating.
According to data from Policygenius the average renters insurance policy in the US costs between $14 and $22 per month as of 2025 for standard coverage levels. That is roughly $168 to $264 per year. For a subtenant this is a modest expense that provides substantial protection.
Coverage Limits to Recommend to Your Subtenant
While every situation differs a reasonable starting point for a subtenant’s policy is:
- Personal property: $20,000 to $30,000 depending on the value of their belongings
- Liability: At least $100,000. Many advisors suggest $300,000 for more complete protection.
- Deductible: $500 to $1,000. Higher deductibles reduce premiums but mean more out of pocket at claim time.
- Medical payments: $1,000 to $5,000
These are starting points only. Coverage needs vary by individual. Your subtenant should consult with a licensed insurance agent to assess their specific situation. For more background on how much coverage is appropriate see our guide on how much renters insurance you actually need.

Modifying Your Existing Renters Insurance for the Sublet Period
Step-by-Step: What to Do Before Your Subtenant Moves In
- Call your insurance company. Explain that you are subletting your unit. Provide the start date and expected end date. Give the subtenant’s name.
- Ask specifically what modifications are required. Some insurers require a subletting endorsement. Others adjust your premium and note the change. A few may not allow subletting at all.
- Clarify off-premises coverage. If you are moving your belongings to another location ask what percentage of your personal property limit applies to items stored away from the insured address.
- Ask about liability continuation. Confirm whether your liability coverage remains active for claims related to the unit even though you are not the occupant.
- Get the changes in writing. Request a policy endorsement document or updated declarations page. Do not rely on verbal assurances.
- Update beneficiary or interested party information. If your landlord requires to be named as an interested party on your policy this is the time to add them.
- Review your premium. Subletting may increase your premium. Some insurers may decrease it if fewer of your belongings remain at the property. Confirm either way.
What to Do If Your Insurer Does Not Allow Subletting
Some insurance companies will not modify a policy to accommodate subletting. If that happens you have realistic options:
Switch insurers. Many major carriers do accommodate subletting with proper notification. Compare quotes from multiple providers. Switching during a policy term is allowed in all US states though you should verify any cancellation fee in your current policy.
Consider a vacant property endorsement. If you are moving out completely but keeping the lease some insurers offer a vacancy endorsement. This covers the unit during a period where no one is occupying it. However this does not apply when a subtenant is present.
Cancel and reinstate. If the sublet is short term and you have no belongings at the property canceling your policy temporarily may be an option. The risk is a coverage gap and a lapse in your insurance history. A lapse can affect your rates when you reinstate. Weigh this carefully.
Coverage Comparison: Your Policy vs. Subtenant’s Policy
This table clarifies what each party’s insurance covers in a typical sublet situation. This is a general educational overview. Actual coverage depends on specific policy terms.
| Coverage Area | Original Tenant’s Policy | Subtenant’s Own Policy |
|---|---|---|
| Original tenant’s personal belongings at unit | Yes (if items remain) | No |
| Original tenant’s belongings at new location | Limited (usually 10% of limit) | No |
| Subtenant’s personal belongings | No | Yes |
| Subtenant’s liability | No | Yes |
| Original tenant’s liability as leaseholder | Varies by policy and insurer | No |
| Additional living expenses for original tenant | Unlikely if not occupying | No |
| Additional living expenses for subtenant | No | Yes |
| Damage caused by subtenant | Gray area – verify with insurer | Yes (from subtenant’s liability) |
| Medical payments for subtenant’s guests | No | Yes |
The cleanest arrangement is always for both parties to carry their own policies. This eliminates ambiguity about who owns what and who caused what.
Landlord Insurance and Why It Does Not Help Either Party
What Landlord Insurance Covers
Your landlord carries their own insurance policy. In most cases this is a landlord insurance or dwelling policy. This policy covers the physical building structure. It covers the landlord’s own property like appliances they own and installed fixtures. It covers the landlord’s liability if a structural defect causes injury.
Landlord insurance does not cover your personal belongings. It does not cover your subtenant’s personal belongings. It does not provide liability protection for either of you as tenants.
This is a critical misunderstanding that causes real financial harm. Many renters assume the building’s insurance covers them. It does not. The landlord’s policy exists to protect the landlord’s investment in the property. Full stop.
For a deeper explanation of how this separation works see our article on what landlord insurance doesn’t cover for tenants.
What Happens When a Subtenant Causes Property Damage
If your subtenant causes damage to the landlord’s property here is how the liability chain typically works:
- The landlord files a claim with their own insurance for the structural damage.
- The landlord’s insurance company may subrogate. This means they pursue the responsible party to recover their payout.
- The responsible party is typically the person who caused the damage. That is your subtenant.
- If your subtenant has no insurance the landlord may pursue them directly. In some cases the landlord pursues you as the primary leaseholder.
- You as the original leaseholder signed the lease. You remain legally responsible for ensuring the property is returned in good condition.
This is exactly why requiring your subtenant to carry liability insurance is not optional. It is a financial safety measure for yourself.

Drafting a Sublease Agreement That Addresses Insurance
Why Your Sublease Agreement Must Include Insurance Requirements
A verbal agreement between you and your subtenant about insurance is worth nothing legally. If they stop paying their premium and you never knew about it you find out when a claim gets denied. Your sublease agreement is the enforcement tool.
Key Insurance Provisions to Include in Your Sublease
Mandatory coverage clause. State clearly that the subtenant is required to maintain active renters insurance throughout the entire sublet period. Specify minimum coverage amounts. A reasonable minimum is $25,000 personal property and $100,000 liability.
Proof of insurance requirement. Require the subtenant to provide a copy of their declarations page before moving in. The declarations page shows the policy number, coverage amounts, effective dates, and the insured property address.
Interested party notification. Require the subtenant to add you as an interested party on their policy. This means their insurer must notify you if the policy is canceled, lapses, or is not renewed. You will not be left unaware.
Policy lapse consequences. State in the agreement that allowing insurance to lapse is a material breach of the sublease. This gives you grounds to terminate the arrangement if coverage disappears.
Hold harmless provision. Include language where the subtenant agrees to hold you harmless for any claims arising from their negligence. This does not eliminate liability but it establishes the parties’ intent and can be used in dispute resolution.
Damage responsibility allocation. Clearly state who is responsible for which types of damage. The subtenant should be responsible for damage they cause. Pre-existing damage should be documented before move-in so there is no dispute at move-out.
What Happens If You Sublet Without Telling Your Insurer
The Legal and Financial Consequences of Non-Disclosure
This situation comes up more often than insurers like to admit. A tenant sublets quietly. Nothing happens for months. Then a fire. Or a theft. Or an injury lawsuit.
The insurer investigates. They discover the unit was occupied by someone other than the named insured. They review the policy application. The named insured never disclosed a sublet. The insurer now has grounds to deny the claim based on material misrepresentation.
Under US insurance contract law an insurer can void a policy or deny a claim if the policyholder withheld or misrepresented a material fact. Subletting is a material fact. Courts in most states have upheld claim denials on this basis.
The consequences stack up quickly:
- Claim denial. You pay all losses out of pocket. A fire that destroys $25,000 in belongings costs you $25,000.
- Policy cancellation. Your insurer cancels your policy. This goes on your insurance record.
- Future coverage difficulty. A cancellation for misrepresentation makes it harder and more expensive to get renters or homeowners insurance in the future.
- Potential legal exposure. In cases of intentional concealment insurers in some states can refer the matter to state fraud bureaus.
None of this is worth the five-minute disclosure call you avoided.
State-by-State Insurance Considerations for Sublets
Insurance rules and tenant rights vary enough by state that a one-size-fits-all approach fails renters. Here is a factual overview of key state differences as of 2025 and 2026.
California
California’s Department of Insurance requires all admitted insurers to handle policy modifications consistently. Insurers cannot arbitrarily refuse to continue coverage when a tenant sublets with proper landlord approval. California also has among the strongest tenant protections for subletting rights. Insurers operating in California must be licensed through the California Department of Insurance.
New York
New York insurers must comply with the state’s Insurance Law regulations. Subletting is common in New York City where the real estate market makes temporary relocations frequent. Many New York insurers have standard endorsements for subletting arrangements. The New York Department of Financial Services oversees insurer conduct.
Texas
Texas does not mandate that insurers cover subletting. Policy terms control. The Texas Department of Insurance allows insurers wide latitude in policy design. Read your policy carefully and contact your insurer before subletting.
Florida
Florida’s insurance market has faced significant volatility in recent years. Insurer availability and policy terms vary widely. The Florida Department of Financial Services regulates insurers in the state. Always verify your specific policy’s subletting provisions with your carrier directly.
Illinois
Illinois mandates fair dealing from insurers under state law. The Illinois Department of Insurance handles complaints if an insurer acts unreasonably in denying a modification request. Chicago tenants have additional protections under local ordinance.
For your specific state contact your state’s department of insurance directly. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners maintains a directory of all state regulators.
Renters Insurance and Short-Term Sublets vs. Long-Term Sublets
Does Duration Affect Your Coverage?
The length of your sublet matters to insurers. Here is how most carriers approach it:
Short-term sublets (under 3 months). Many insurers treat these more flexibly. They may simply note the change without requiring a formal endorsement. Your premium adjustment is usually small.
Medium-term sublets (3 to 6 months). Most insurers require formal notification and some policy modification. Expect a premium adjustment. The insurer may require documentation of the sublease agreement.
Long-term sublets (6 months to 12 months or more). This raises questions about primary residence status. If you are not returning to this address as your primary home some insurers will require you to reclassify the policy or cancel it entirely.
Indefinite sublets. If there is no defined end date insurers may consider this a permanent change of occupancy. This is a significant red flag for most renters insurance underwriters.
The Bankrate guide on renters insurance notes that your primary residence classification is one of the most fundamental factors in how a renters policy is written. Changing who occupies the residence without notice directly affects that classification.
Be honest about the sublet duration from the start. If it extends beyond what you originally told your insurer notify them immediately.
Practical Tips for Managing Insurance Throughout Your Sublet
Before Move-In Day
Create a detailed photo and video walkthrough of the entire apartment. Note every scratch, stain, and defect. Date stamp everything. Share copies with your subtenant and your landlord. This establishes baseline condition documentation that protects all parties.
Create a written inventory of any belongings you leave behind. Include item descriptions, purchase dates, and estimated replacement values. Attach this list to your sublease agreement. Both parties should sign it.
Collect proof of insurance from your subtenant before handing over keys. Do not accept a promise to provide it later. Verify the policy is active, covers the correct address, and meets the minimums in your sublease agreement.
During the Sublet Period
Set a calendar reminder every 30 to 60 days to request updated proof of insurance from your subtenant. One confirmation at move-in is not enough. Policies lapse. Payments get missed. You need to know before a claim arises.
Keep all communication with your subtenant in writing. Email or text messages create a paper trail. If a dispute arises about who was responsible for maintaining insurance written communication is your evidence.
Notify your insurer of any changes to the sublet arrangement as they happen. Extended duration. Change of subtenant. Early termination. All of these are material changes your insurer should know about.
At Move-Out
Conduct a joint walkthrough with your subtenant present. Compare current condition to your move-in photos and videos. Document any new damage. Note it in writing with both parties’ signatures.
Determine who is responsible for damage before releasing any deposit. If a claim needs to be filed against your subtenant’s policy file it promptly. Insurance claims have time limits.
Notify your insurer that the sublet has ended and you are resuming occupancy or that you are moving elsewhere and need to update your policy address. For guidance on policy updates during moves see our article on what happens to renters insurance when you move.
Key Takeaways
This is a topic with enough moving parts that a summary is genuinely useful before you make any decisions.
- Your existing renters insurance does not automatically cover a subletting situation. You must notify your insurer and modify your policy.
- Your subtenant has zero coverage under your renters insurance. They need their own separate policy.
- Your landlord’s insurance covers the building only. It protects neither you nor your subtenant.
- Get landlord approval in writing before subletting. State laws vary on what landlords can require.
- Include mandatory insurance provisions in your sublease agreement. Require proof of coverage before move-in.
- Failing to disclose subletting to your insurer can void your coverage and result in complete claim denial.
- Short-term sublets are handled differently than long-term sublets by most insurers.
- Document the apartment condition thoroughly before and after the sublet period.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. As a subtenant you can purchase your own renters insurance policy. You list the sublet address as your residence. The fact that you are a subtenant rather than a primary leaseholder does not disqualify you. Most major insurers will issue a policy to a subtenant as long as the address is your primary residence during the sublet period.
Your renters insurance covers your belongings from covered perils like fire, theft, and certain water damage. It does not specifically cover damage caused intentionally by your subtenant. If your subtenant steals your belongings the theft may be covered. If they negligently damage your property coverage depends on your specific policy language. This is another reason requiring your subtenant to carry liability insurance is important.
If your lease prohibits subletting without permission you are in violation of your lease regardless of insurance status. Your insurer may also deny coverage if the subletting violates your lease terms since some policies require that your occupancy is legally compliant. Unauthorized subletting creates both legal and insurance risk simultaneously.
The landlord’s property insurance typically covers the building damage first. That insurer may then pursue your subtenant through a legal process called subrogation to recover the payout. If your subtenant has liability insurance their policy would respond to this claim. If they have no insurance you may be pursued as the primary leaseholder depending on your lease terms and state law.
Most renters insurance policies include off-premises coverage for personal property. This typically covers a percentage of your total personal property limit. Often 10%. Items in a storage unit or at a different address would fall under this provision. Check your specific policy for the exact percentage and any exclusions. This coverage is usually not enough to fully protect a household of belongings stored elsewhere.
This article was researched and written by the InsureDiary Editorial Team. Our team focuses on accurate, US-specific insurance education for everyday readers. Learn more about who we are on our About Us page. For questions about this content or to suggest a topic reach us through our Contact Us page.
⚠️ Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is educational in nature and does not constitute professional insurance, financial, or legal advice. Coverage rules, state laws, and insurer policies change frequently. Always review your specific policy documents and consult with a licensed insurance professional in your state before making coverage decisions related to subletting.
Last Updated: May 2026
Subletting Insurance Readiness Checklist
Work through each step before your subtenant moves in. Check off each item as you complete it to see your readiness score.



