TL;DR: Most new Nashville landlords assume their homeowners policy covers a rental property—it doesn't. Switching to a landlord (DP) policy, requiring tenant renters insurance, and accounting for Nashville's specific risks like storm damage and short-term rental regulations can save you thousands in uncovered losses.
This is the single most expensive mistake new landlords make, and it happens constantly in Nashville neighborhoods like East Nashville, Germantown, and Antioch where homeowners are converting properties or buying duplexes as their first investment.
A standard homeowners policy (called an HO-3) is designed for owner-occupied homes. The moment you hand someone else the keys and collect rent, your insurer considers that property a different type of risk. If a tenant's guest slips on the front steps and sues you, your homeowners policy can deny the claim outright because you weren't living there when it happened.
What you actually need is a dwelling fire policy, commonly called a DP-1 or DP-3. These policies are specifically built for landlord-occupied properties. They cover the structure, your liability as a property owner, and lost rental income if the property becomes uninhabitable after a covered event.
The cost difference between a homeowners and landlord policy isn't as dramatic as most people expect. But the coverage gap between them is massive. A denied claim on a $350,000 Sylvan Park rental could wipe out years of rental income overnight.
One important detail: if you're converting your primary residence into a rental and keeping your existing mortgage, your lender also needs to know. Many mortgage agreements require you to notify them of occupancy changes, and your insurance documentation needs to match.
New landlords often think their own policy protects everything inside the property. It doesn't. Your landlord policy covers the building—walls, roof, plumbing, HVAC. Your tenant's furniture, electronics, clothing, and personal items? Those are completely unprotected unless your tenant carries renters insurance.
This matters to you as the landlord for a reason that isn't obvious: liability protection flows both ways.
When your tenant has renters insurance, their policy includes personal liability coverage. If their dog bites a neighbor, if they accidentally start a kitchen fire, or if a guest gets injured inside the unit, their renters policy responds first. Without it, the injured party's attorney is coming straight to you as the property owner.
You're allowed to require renters insurance as a lease condition in Tennessee. Many Nashville property managers already do this as standard practice. A typical renters policy runs $15–$25 per month for a tenant, but it creates a critical buffer between their mistakes and your bank account.
Build the requirement into your lease with a minimum coverage amount—$100,000 in liability is a reasonable starting point—and ask to be listed as an "interested party" on the policy. This way you get notified if the tenant cancels or lets the policy lapse.
Nashville averages more severe weather events than most new landlords from other markets realize. Spring 2026 tornado season is right around the corner, and Davidson County sits squarely in a zone where wind, hail, and flash flooding can all hit the same property in the same week.
Here's where it gets specific to your investment:
Wind and hail damage is typically covered under a standard landlord policy, but your deductible might be percentage-based rather than a flat dollar amount. A 2% wind/hail deductible on a $400,000 property means you're paying the first $8,000 out of pocket before coverage kicks in. Many first-time landlords don't discover this until they're filing a claim after a spring storm rips through their Donelson rental.
Flood damage is a separate policy entirely and is not included in any standard landlord policy. Nashville's flood history—particularly the devastating 2010 floods—should be a wake-up call. Properties near Mill Creek, Whites Creek, or along the Cumberland River corridor carry obvious risk, but even properties outside FEMA-designated flood zones can flood during heavy rain events.
Sewer backup coverage is another add-on that Nashville landlords need to actively request. Older Nashville neighborhoods with aging infrastructure are particularly vulnerable, and a single sewer backup event can cause $10,000–$30,000 in damage to floors, walls, and systems.
Before closing on a rental property, ask your insurance agent to walk through these specific coverages line by line. Know your deductibles, know your exclusions, and know what endorsements make sense for that particular property's location and age.
If you're even considering listing your Nashville investment property on Airbnb or VRBO—even occasionally—your standard landlord policy won't cover short-term rental activity. Nashville also has specific permitting requirements through Metro Codes that vary by zoning district. Insurance and permits are two separate conversations, and you need both sorted before your first guest books a stay.
Insurance Agent
As a dedicated State Farm Insurance Agent in Nashville, TN, I specialize in helping individuals and businesses create customized coverage plans...
Nashville, Tennessee
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