Liability Insurance
This varies from landlord to landlord. If you are staying in full fledged apartment, the insurance will be taken care of by the apartment owner itself. otherwise if you staying in independant house, we have take care of insurance cover for strom damage, flooding.
A person who rents a residence can obtain "renter's insurance". That kind of coverage protects the tenant's contents (personal property). The owner of the building is ordinarily responsible for maintaining insurance on the structure.
The purpose of landlord insurance is to reimburse a landlord if for some reason he is unable to use his property for income due to a tenant. For instant, it covers damage done by a tenant, as well as reimbursement for lost rent while the apt. is uninhabitable, and it even covers court costs.
A property is not a contract or a business. A liability insurance policy is a kind of contract but not a business. the answer is b...
It provides protection against damage or theft to items on your property. If something like a fire happens at your residence and damages your property, property insurance covers that.
DirectLine is a UK-based insurance company that offers a range of insurance services, including car, home, travel, pet, breakdown, landlord, van, and business insurances.
Citizen Insurance is a property insurance company. You can insure your building, your contents or both. They have a range of policy options that are flexible around your requirements.
Usually tenants are responsible for accidents in their apartments. But that doesn't stop injured people from suing EVERYONE including the landlord, on the theory that maybe the reason for the accident was something the landlord was responsible for (bad electric wiring that the tenant made worse for example) or say a bathtub that had no 'non-slip' strips in the bottom and the tenant got hurt. So the landlord will want to be what's called an "additional insured" on a tenant's liabilityinsurance policy. That's the kind of insurance that protects against things like accidents that hurt people and damage property. By adding the landlord's name, if the tenant and the landlord are sued, the tenant's insurance company would be required to also defend the landlord. That doesn't mean that if the landlord loses that the tenant's insurance company pays the damages that the landlord owes, it just means the insurance company pays for the lawyer and defense team.
Yes, you need an insurance license to sell any kind of insurance in Texas. For "Commercial Insurance" operations, you will need a Property and Casualty Insurance License form the state of Texas.
Most insurance companies would be able to provide this kind of insurance on multiple properties in multiple locations. Insurance companies do not need to be local to the property that they are insuring.
Insurance for one's personal property such as auto or homeowner's insurance is tax deductible. Other tax deductible insurances are medical and dental insurances.