Types of Real Estate Insurance in Kentucky
There are 3 main types of insurance for real estate:
Errors and omissions insurance for real estate agents in Kentucky is mandatory. Kentucky is one of 13 mandatory states where typically each agent will obtain their own individual agent-based policy plus an excess policy purchased by the brokerage. At PBI Group we believe there is a better way, one where the agency buys one policy that covers both the agents and the company. This 1 policy has broader coverages and better protection than what is provided by have disparate agent policies topped off by an excess policy.
What drives E&O claims in Kentucky
Two policies can carry the same limit and the same price, yet respond in opposite ways to the same lawsuit. These anonymized KY claims show the difference the policy form makes.
The eighteen acres already gone
Greensburg, KYA buyer's agent represented purchasers of a rural Greensburg, Kentucky property marketed as roughly 41 acres with a house and barn for $365,000; they had it inspected, bought an owner's title policy, and closed in summer 2022. Afterward a title search revealed a 1988 deed had conveyed 18 of those acres to a third party from the same source of title — so the buyers actually received about 26 acres, not 41, with two deeds now overlapping. They sued broadly: the seller for rescission and unjust enrichment, the title company for a declaration of its coverage, the third party to quiet title, and the buyer's agent for negligence and breach of fiduciary duty (alleging she discouraged a survey and withheld a contract copy after handwritten changes), with the brokerage on a vicarious theory. The agent and brokerage reported it to their carrier; the matter is being defended with no indemnity paid — and the central allegation is directly contradicted by a signed addendum in which the brokerage recommended a survey and title insurance.
On a standard form
A negligence claim recast as a breach of fiduciary duty and buried in a five-party title-and-acreage suit gives a weaker form two openings: to argue the fiduciary framing edges toward the intentional and contest the defense on the pleadings, and — where defense costs erode the limit — to drain the coverage while the agent is dragged through a multi-defendant fight that isn't really about her conduct.
On the PBI Group form
Advising buyers on survey, title, and inspections and handling their contract is core Real Estate Professional Services, so the negligence and fiduciary counts against the agent (and the vicarious count against the brokerage) are covered Wrongful Acts the policy engages. The strength of the defense is the record: the buyers signed an addendum acknowledging the brokerage's written recommendation to obtain a survey and title insurance, and the contract itself advised that boundaries weren't warranted and a pinned-and-staked survey should be obtained — so an agent accused of *discouraging* the very protection she recommended is one the form can defend with confidence. The PBI Group form's dishonesty exclusion applies only on final adjudication of intentional wrongdoing, so the fiduciary label doesn't strip the defense, and Claim Expenses sit under a separate limit that doesn't erode the coverage across a multi-defendant suit. The honest center favors the agent: the shortfall was caused by an undisclosed 1988 deed and a title-search miss, so rescission and unjust enrichment run to the seller, the declaratory count to the title company, and quiet title to the third party — the agent's exposure is narrow and largely derivative, and those restitution/title remedies sit outside her covered professional-liability loss.
On land and acreage deals the recorded history can hide an old conveyance no one catches until after closing, and when the acres come up short the buyer sues everyone who touched the deal. The single best answer is the one this agent already had — recommend a survey and title insurance in writing and have the buyer sign acknowledging it, then document the contract and any changes and give the buyer their copies. What stands behind you is a form that treats your representation as covered professional work and defends it, while the missing acres stay with the seller and the title company who are answerable for them.
Illustrative summary of a real claim; coverage always depends on the specific facts and policy terms.
Kentucky real estate E&O — frequently asked questions
Does Kentucky require real estate agents to carry E&O insurance?
Yes. KRS 324.395 mandates E&O for every active Kentucky real estate licensee. Coverage minimums are set by Commission rule under 201 KAR 11:220. Inactive licensees must obtain a 1-year Extended Reporting Period (ERP) at current minimums before going inactive — a unique requirement among mandatory-E&O states.
What's the Extended Reporting Period requirement and why does Kentucky require it?
Per KRS 324.395(1), Kentucky licensees going inactive must purchase a 1-year ERP that maintains coverage for claims arising from prior active practice. ERP runs at the minimum requirements in effect at the time of inactivation. The rule covers the gap that opens when an active policy lapses but a buyer or seller files a claim months later. KREC enforces via Form 203 + $10 fee for independent policies.
What if my Kentucky group E&O premium goes above $200/year?
Per KRS 324.395(7), the entire E&O mandate is suspended for that contract year if the Commission cannot procure compliant coverage at $200 or less per licensee. This is unique among state mandates. In practice, KREC has consistently negotiated below the cap through competitive bidding. PBI Group's independent program isn't bound by the statutory cap and typically offers higher limits for brokerages who want better coverage than the group floor.
What is the cost for E&O real estate insurance in Kentucky?
A Kentucky brokerage can generally expect E&O real estate insurance to cost about $2,000–$3,000 per $1 million in revenue with no claims on record. Your premium is subject to claims history and other factors, so the exact number depends on your specifics.
Kentucky requirements & coverage detail
The fine print — what counts as compliant coverage in Kentucky, the statutes behind it, and how our policy form responds. Click any section to expand; sources are cited.
Kentucky mandates E&O — the statute and the ERP twist
KRS 324.395 requires every active real estate licensee in Kentucky to carry E&O. Two things make Kentucky's mandate distinctive:
1. The Extended Reporting Period (ERP) requirement for inactive licensees. Per KRS 324.395(1), licensees going inactive must obtain a 1-year ERP at the minimum requirements in effect at the time of inactivation. This covers tail claims from prior active practice — a feature most state mandates omit. KREC enforces it via Form 203 + $10 fee for independent policies.
2. The $200 statutory premium ceiling. Per KRS 324.395(7), if the Commission cannot procure group coverage at $200 or less per licensee per year, the entire mandate voids for that contract year. This is unusual — most state mandates have no premium cap.
Coverage minimums and terms are set by Commission rule under 201 KAR 11:220. Independent policies are permitted (KRS 324.395(4)) if they match the group policy's coverage and the carrier's financial condition meets Commission minimums. Verification is filed with renewal.
Kentucky disclosure statutes that drive E&O claims
Five KRS Chapter 324 sections drive most agent E&O exposure:
KRS 324.360 — Duties of brokers/sales associates. Fiduciary duties (loyalty, obedience, full disclosure, confidentiality, accountability, reasonable care). The standard-of-care benchmark for negligence claims.
KRS 324.365 — Agency relationships. Mandatory written agency disclosure at first substantive contact. Undisclosed dual agency is a recurring discipline category.
KRS 324.160 — License prohibitions. Unauthorized practice grounds; activities outside license scope expose the broker to direct liability.
KRS 324.410 — Advertising and sales prohibitions. Misleading advertising claims; copyright/IP issues in marketing.
KRS 324.420 — Trust account handling. Escrow mismanagement is a frequent driver — and most E&O policies sub-limit or exclude trust violations, which is why proper account discipline is non-negotiable.
How Kentucky's market drives premium
Three metros set Kentucky's market shape:
- Louisville — the largest market by transaction volume; mixed urban/suburban with elevated transaction-coordinator and disclosure exposure.
- Lexington / Fayette County — horse-country premium pricing, equine and farm-property transactions where E&O claim severity runs above state baseline. High-value rural assets (broodmare farms, horse facilities) carry unique condition-disclosure exposure.
- Bowling Green — growing Western Kentucky University corridor.
Premium drivers specific to Kentucky: - Ohio River corridor flood disclosure — Louisville and Northern Kentucky floodplain transactions drive recurring claims when prior flooding wasn't disclosed. - Equine and agricultural easements — water rights, fencing, riparian access disputes around horse and cattle properties. - Coal/mineral rights in eastern Kentucky — severed mineral interests are common; failure to disclose is a discipline trigger.
Recommended Kentucky configuration: $1M per claim / $2M aggregate baseline; $1M / $3M for firms with material Ohio River corridor or horse-property volume; ERP rider for any licensee who anticipates inactive status.
Coverage configuration for a Kentucky brokerage
PBI Group's recommended Kentucky E&O configuration:
1. Per-claim and aggregate limits above the statutory floor. Recommended: $1M per claim / $2M aggregate for 10–25-agent firms; $1M / $3M for higher transaction volume or material horse-country / floodplain exposure.
2. Defense outside the limits. Kentucky's group policy treatment of defense varies — independent policy form should explicitly state defense outside the limits to avoid eroded indemnity in multi-year KREC investigations.
3. Kentucky-specific endorsements: - Ohio River floodplain disclosure rider — important for Louisville, Newport, Covington, and downstream counties. - Equine / horse-property endorsement for Fayette and surrounding counties. - Severed mineral rights coverage for eastern Kentucky coal-country transactions. - ERP rider so the mandatory 1-year inactive-period coverage doesn't require buying a separate policy.
4. Group plan vs. independent. KREC's group policy (capped at $200/year statutory) is the default. PBI Group writes independent equivalents with higher limits, defense outside, and the Kentucky-specific endorsements above.