Types of Real Estate Insurance in Nebraska
There are 3 main types of insurance for real estate:
Errors and omissions insurance for real estate agents in Nebraska is mandatory. Nebraska 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 Nebraska
Two policies can carry the same limit and the same price, yet respond in opposite ways to the same lawsuit. These anonymized NE claims show the difference the policy form makes.
Received both, thank you
Ashland, NEAn investor entity bought a vacant lot in Ashland, Nebraska for $240,000 from two family trusts in a trustee sale with no seller disclosure, with the insured agent representing the buyer. During the thirty-day due-diligence period, the listing broker emailed the buyer's agent a recent survey and two documents depicting proposed city easements, and she replied the same day: "Received both. Thank you." The sale closed the next month; that fall the city condemned a portion of the property, and the buyer sued the trustee sellers and the listing broker for failure to disclose adverse material facts under Nebraska's disclosure statute. The listing broker then filed a third-party complaint against the buyer's own agent, alleging her errors, omissions, and negligence and seeking contribution, indemnification, and his attorney's fees. The certified-mail summons served in mid-April sat unanswered past the thirty-day answer deadline and did not reach the carrier until mid-July — a day after opposing counsel moved for a default judgment; the claim has been in active defense since, with nothing paid on the claim itself.
On a standard form
A contribution-and-indemnity complaint filed by another professional — not the insured's own client — gives a weaker form room to argue at the threshold that this isn't the kind of claim the policy was meant to answer, contesting the duty to defend before the merits are ever reached. And where defense costs erode the limit, a multi-party case that has to be tracked through amendment, dismissal, and motion practice can drain the dollars meant to resolve it.
On the PBI Group form
A third-party complaint alleging the agent's errors, omissions, and negligence in performing her buyer-agency duties is a Claim alleging Wrongful Acts in the rendering of Real Estate Professional Services, and the PBI Group form defends it regardless of who the claimant is — a client, a counterparty, or the broker on the other side of the deal. The counts against her sound purely in negligence, with no fraud pleaded, keeping the matter in the covered heart of the form; the dishonesty exclusion would apply only on final adjudication of intentional wrongdoing in any event. Claim Expenses sit under a separate limit that doesn't erode the coverage, which matters in a multi-party case where her defense must track the entire underlying fight. Honest about the contested pieces: the exposure is derivative — a share of whatever the buyer actually proves against the listing broker — the buyer's loss runs through a government condemnation with its own compensation process, and the pivotal question of what the agent did with the due-diligence materials is genuinely contested, not resolved. The one thing no policy language can undo is a default judgment, which is why the coverage only works if the summons reaches the carrier in time.
Two habits carry this file. Treat every document received during due diligence as something to transmit, explain, and document — the four-word acknowledgment that closes the loop for the sender opens it for you — and get a served summons to your carrier the day it arrives, even if the claim seems misdirected and even if someone else says they'll handle it. What stands behind the agent is a form that treats a third-party contribution-and-indemnity complaint as a covered claim and funds the defense outside the limit — protection that depends on the carrier learning of the summons in time to act.
Illustrative summary of a real claim; coverage always depends on the specific facts and policy terms.
Nebraska real estate E&O — frequently asked questions
Does Nebraska require real estate agents to carry E&O insurance?
Yes. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 81-885.55 mandates E&O for every active Nebraska real estate licensee — broker or salesperson — at minimum $100,000 per occurrence and $300,000 annual aggregate (299 Neb. Admin. Code § 8-004). Inactive licensees are exempt. Failure to file a certificate of compliance triggers automatic inactive status under § 81-885.55(3).
What if my Nebraska E&O lapses?
Per Neb. Rev. Stat. § 81-885.55(3), the license goes inactive automatically until a current certificate is filed. Reactivation requires a transfer fee under § 81-885.14. Additionally, NREC may impose civil fines up to $5,000 per violation or all earned commissions per § 81-885.10. The cleanest fix is continuous coverage with prior-acts protection and timely certificate filing at each renewal.
How does Nebraska's 2026 2-year license cycle affect E&O timing?
Effective January 2026, NREC moved to 2-year license renewal cycles (Dec 2025 renewals run Jan 2026 – Jan 2028). E&O proof submission aligns with the renewal cycle, simplifying compliance tracking. The underlying mandate is unchanged: $100K/$300K minimum per licensee, certificate on file with NREC. PBI Group's Nebraska program structures policies to the new 2-year cadence.
What is the cost for E&O real estate insurance in Nebraska?
A Nebraska 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.
Nebraska requirements & coverage detail
The fine print — what counts as compliant coverage in Nebraska, the statutes behind it, and how our policy form responds. Click any section to expand; sources are cited.
Nebraska mandates E&O — what § 81-885.55 actually says
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 81-885.55(1) mandates: "Every licensee under the Nebraska Real Estate License Act, except an inactive broker or salesperson, shall have errors and omissions insurance to cover all activities contemplated under the act."
Coverage minimums (299 Neb. Admin. Code § 8-004.01): - $100,000 combined single limit per occurrence - $300,000 annual aggregate per licensee - Deductible cannot exceed the group policy's deductible - Coverage must be approved by the Nebraska Department of Insurance
Procurement. The Commission contracts the group plan via competitive bid (§ 81-885.55(2)) — no carrier-cancellation right (§ 81-885.55(3)). Independent coverage is permitted if it meets the § 8-004 minima.
Enforcement (§ 81-885.55(3)): Failure to file a certificate of compliance places the license on inactive status until proof is submitted. Reactivation requires a transfer fee under § 81-885.14. Per § 81-885.10(1), NREC may also impose civil fines up to $5,000 per violation or all commissions earned per violation for non-compliance.
Premium ceiling. Per § 81-885.55(4), if no compliant carrier offers coverage at $500/year or less, the mandate voids for that contract year — a unique provision among mandatory-E&O states.
Nebraska statutes that drive E&O claims
Three primary statutes underpin Nebraska agent E&O exposure:
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 81-885.03 — Licensure required. Activities outside the license scope (or unlicensed practice) trigger cease-and-desist orders, fines, and direct negligence exposure for the brokerage.
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 81-885.10 — Broad regulatory authority. Failure to disclose material facts, misrepresentation, and trust-account violations are all enforceable here. Civil fines up to $5,000 per violation or all earned commissions.
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 81-885.55 — E&O mandate itself. Non-compliance triggers inactive status — a discipline path bypassing other categories.
Nebraska's agricultural orientation drives farmland-specific exposure that's not directly statutorily called out: - Soil-quality and conservation-program (CRP) eligibility representations - Drainage and irrigation easements - Wind-energy easement disclosures (Nebraska has expanding wind-energy build-out) - Mineral / oil rights in the Niobrara Shale and Panhandle - Center-pivot irrigation system condition and water rights
How Nebraska's market drives premium
Three metros set the market:
- Omaha — Nebraska's largest market by transaction volume; rapid metro growth, mixed urban/suburban inventory, elevated transaction-coordinator and disclosure exposure.
- Lincoln — state capital and University of Nebraska market; stable demand, government and education employment base.
- Grand Island — smaller but central to Nebraska's agricultural transaction volume.
Premium drivers specific to Nebraska: - Agricultural land transactions dominate outside metros. Center-pivot irrigation, drainage easements, water-rights, and CRP enrollment representations drive recurring claims. - Wind-energy easements in the Sandhills and Panhandle. - Niobrara Shale mineral rights in northwestern Nebraska. - Omaha metro growth — high-velocity transactions create disclosure-pace pressure that drives claim frequency.
2026 transition note: Effective January 2026, NREC moved to 2-year license renewal cycles. This aligns E&O proof submission with renewal timing and reduces churn, but doesn't change the underlying $100K/$300K minimum or the immediate-inactivation penalty for lapse.
Recommended Nebraska configuration: $1M per claim / $2M aggregate baseline; $1M / $3M for firms with material agricultural transaction volume; farmland-specific endorsement.
Coverage configuration for a Nebraska brokerage
PBI Group's recommended Nebraska E&O configuration:
1. Limits above the statutory floor. Recommended: $1M per claim / $2M aggregate for 10–25-agent firms; $1M / $3M for firms with material agricultural transaction volume.
2. Defense treatment. Nebraska statute and rule are silent on defense-inside vs. outside. Verify independent policy form explicitly states defense outside the limits to avoid eroded indemnity.
3. Nebraska-specific endorsements: - Farmland transaction endorsement (drainage, irrigation, CRP eligibility, soil quality). - Wind-energy easement disclosure rider for Sandhills and Panhandle firms. - Mineral rights coverage for Niobrara Shale region. - Property management rider if the firm handles rentals.
4. Group plan vs. independent. NREC's group (RISC) is convenient — non-cancellable while in force. PBI Group writes independent equivalents with higher limits and Nebraska-specific endorsements. The 2026 2-year renewal cycle simplifies tracking either way.