Types of Real Estate Insurance in South Dakota
There are 3 main types of insurance for real estate:
Errors and omissions insurance for real estate agents in South Dakota is mandatory. South Dakota 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.
South Dakota real estate E&O — frequently asked questions
Does South Dakota require real estate agents to carry E&O insurance?
Yes. SDCL § 36-21A-49.1 (salespersons and broker associates) and § 36-21A-72 (brokers) mandate E&O — at minimum $100,000 per claim / $200,000 annual aggregate (ARSD 20:69:15:06). Coverage required for all active brokers, broker associates, salespersons, property managers, auctioneers, and residential rental agents. Carriers must be admitted in SD or the licensee's resident state.
Can my brokerage use an office policy instead of individual agent E&O?
No — South Dakota requires individual proof for each licensee under § 36-21A-49.1 and § 36-21A-72. However, brokerages typically buy 'office' or 'excess' policies on top of individual agent coverage to provide $1M–$3M of total firm-level protection. Group plans like RISC cover individual mandates; PBI Group offers higher-limit firm policies. Verify all carriers are SD-admitted under ARSD 20:69:15:06.01.
Are Black Hills vacation-rental claims covered under standard E&O?
Generally yes for negligent misrepresentation and disclosure errors, but check carrier specifics. The Black Hills tourism corridor (Pennington, Custer, Lawrence counties) generates a recurring claim pattern: STR ordinance compliance failures, seasonal-vacancy property-management disputes, and second-home disclosure issues. PBI Group's South Dakota program includes a Black Hills STR-compliance endorsement specifically for Rapid City and resort-area firms.
What is the cost for E&O real estate insurance in South Dakota?
For E&O real estate insurance in South Dakota, budget around $2,000–$3,000 per $1 million in revenue if your record is clean. The figure is subject to claims history and other factors like coverage limits, deductible, and transaction volume.
South Dakota requirements & coverage detail
The fine print — what counts as compliant coverage in South Dakota, the statutes behind it, and how our policy form responds. Click any section to expand; sources are cited.
South Dakota mandates E&O — broker, salesperson, and beyond
SDCL § 36-21A-49.1 (salespersons and broker associates): "No salesperson's or broker associate's license may be issued or renewed unless the applicant has filed proof of errors and omissions insurance coverage."
SDCL § 36-21A-72 (brokers): "No broker's license may be issued or renewed unless the applicant has filed proof of errors and omissions insurance coverage pursuant to § 36-21A-122."
Unusually, South Dakota's mandate covers a broader licensee population than peer states. All active brokers, broker associates, property managers, auctioneers, residential rental agents, and salespersons must carry coverage.
Coverage minimums (ARSD 20:69:15:06): - $100,000 per claim - $200,000 annual aggregate - Defense costs typically inside the limit per group policy form - Carrier must be admitted in SD OR in the licensee's state of residence
Group plan: SDREC works with RISC (CNA-issued). Independent coverage permitted under SDCL § 36-21A-122 if from an admitted carrier and matching minima.
Brokerages frequently buy excess policies ($1M–$3M total) over individual agent coverage to provide firm-level protection — a common SD market structure.
South Dakota statutes that drive E&O claims
Five statutes drive the bulk of SD agent E&O claims:
SDCL § 36-21A-51 — Agency disclosure. Brokers must provide written agency disclosure at first substantive contact. Failure exposes to negligence claims; recurring discipline category.
SDCL § 36-21A-60 — Seller property condition disclosure. Sellers and agents must disclose known defects (structural, environmental). Omission triggers E&O suits.
SDCL § 43-4-38 — Seller's Property Disclosure Statement. Mandates form revealing property condition; nondisclosure liability runs through the agent.
SDCL § 36-21A-39 — Fiduciary duties. Loyalty, obedience, full disclosure. Breach is the standard professional-negligence claim.
SDCL § 36-21A-52 — Dual agency. Requires written consent. Conflicts and consent-failure claims drive a recurring share of disputes.
South Dakota case law E&O has to defend
Three appellate decisions shape SD agent-liability standards:
Houska v. City of Pierre, 2021 S.D. 14, 957 N.W.2d 628 — Supreme Court held a real estate agent liable for negligent misrepresentation in failing to disclose flooding history. Damages affirmed under tort law tied to SDCL § 36-21A-60 disclosure duties. Recent and on-point for property-condition claims.
Vander Linden v. USD Partners, LP, 2019 S.D. 9, 922 N.W.2d 164 — Agent breached fiduciary duty (SDCL § 36-21A-39) by failing to disclose pipeline easement; resulted in transaction rescission. Emphasizes E&O relevance for defense of fiduciary-breach claims.
Swenson v. Cahoy, 2017 S.D. 73, 903 N.W.2d 796 — Supreme Court upheld broker liability for undisclosed defects in agricultural land sale; invokes SDCL § 36-21A-51 agency duties. E&O covered defense costs.
The pattern: SD courts hold agents directly liable for misrepresentation, fiduciary breach, and disclosure failure across both residential and agricultural transactions.
How South Dakota's market drives premium
SD has roughly 5,000 active licensees (SDREC 2025 data). Three metros set the market:
- Sioux Falls — the largest market by volume; $320K median (2025 data). Mixed urban/suburban; growing tech and finance corridor.
- Rapid City — $350K median. Black Hills tourism and second-home market. Seasonal vacancy and STR-compliance claims drive recurring volume.
- Aberdeen — $240K median. Agricultural and small-town focused.
Premium drivers specific to South Dakota: - Agricultural land transactions — soil-quality, drainage, conservation-easement disclosure. SDCL § 43-4-38 disclosure failures drive a high share of claims by severity. - Black Hills tourism — Rapid City, Lead, Deadwood, Custer. Seasonal short-term rentals create STR-compliance and disclosure claims; vacation-rental management is a high-claim category. - Native American trust land — federal overlays, sovereign-immunity title issues. Reservation-adjacent transactions carry chain-of-title complexity unique among U.S. states. - Mineral / oil/gas rights in the Powder River Basin (western counties).
Recommended SD configuration: $1M per claim / $2M aggregate baseline; brokerage-level $1M–$3M excess over individual coverage (common SD structure); trust-land complexity rider for reservation-adjacent firms; Black Hills STR-compliance endorsement.
Coverage configuration for a South Dakota brokerage
PBI Group's recommended South Dakota E&O configuration:
1. Individual + brokerage excess. SD's market structure typically pairs individual agent coverage ($100K/$200K minimum) with a brokerage-level excess policy ($1M-$3M total). PBI Group's program writes both individually for compliance and at the firm level for protection.
2. Defense outside the limits. ARSD 20:69:15:06 is silent on defense — verify the policy form explicitly states defense outside, especially for multi-year Native American trust-land or Black Hills disputes.
3. South Dakota-specific endorsements: - Agricultural transaction endorsement (drainage, conservation, soil-quality representations). - Black Hills STR / vacation-rental compliance rider for Pennington, Custer, and Lawrence county firms. - Native American trust-land complexity coverage for reservation-adjacent firms. - Mineral rights endorsement for western counties.
4. Group plan vs. independent. SDREC's RISC group is convenient for individual licensees. PBI Group writes independent equivalents and the brokerage-level excess that's standard practice in the SD market.