Insurance for Colorado property managers
Picture this in Denver: a tenant raises concerns about mold, alleging the property manager's delayed response caused health issues and property damage. Or in Boulder, a renter with a disability requests a reasonable accommodation under the Fair Housing Act, and a mishandled request turns into a discrimination allegation.
Whether you oversee residential properties in Colorado Springs, manage apartment complexes in Aurora, or offer HOA/COA management as part of a full-service brokerage in Fort Collins, the standard sales-side E&O forms often aren't written for PMs. Our PBI Group policy is — a form built to respond to property-management claims, not a generic real-estate E&O policy.
The Colorado Division of Real Estate at the Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA) mandates that real estate licensees carry errors & omissions (E&O) insurance. But even if you have a state-bid real estate E&O policy with a PM endorsement, you are likely still undercovered. Many state-bid programs add property-management services into the definition with an endorsement, but most of the time they still don't adequately cover the top PM E&O claims — like bodily injury / property damage or fair housing.
We close that gap by insuring the legal entity, as well as all agents, brokers, and employees doing business on behalf of the brokerage. That one firm-wide policy exceeds the state real estate E&O requirement, and it includes both real estate and property- management coverages in a single form — instead of simply bolting on add-ons.
What insurance do Colorado property management companies need?
Most Colorado property management firms carry at least three key coverages.
- Errors & Omissions (E&O) — also called professional liability, this responds to allegations of negligence in your professional services, such as leasing space, collecting rents, selecting tenants, and arranging for repair, renovation, or maintenance of buildings or grounds by others.
- Cyber Liability — property managers store sensitive tenant and client information like payment details, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers. Even if that data lives in a third-party database, you can still be liable if your systems or email are breached. A good cyber-liability policy protects against these and other risks.
- General Liability (GL) — covers ordinary business risks, like a visitor tripping at your office or someone suing for false advertising. It's also required as a contingency so that good E&O policies can cover contingent bodily-injury / property-damage claims: GL and E&O, written correctly, work hand-in-hand on those claims depending on how closely the allegation is tied to professional services.
- Commercial Property — if you own your building, property coverage protects it, and it's often bundled with GL in a commercial package or business owner's policy (BOP).
Property management E&O claims
Two E&O policies can carry the same limit and nearly the same premium and respond in completely opposite ways to the same Colorado lawsuit. The difference is the wording. Each carrier has its own policy form, with unique exclusions and definitions. At PBI Group, we have engineered our form to actually address property-management claims.
The top category of E&O claims for property managers involves allegations of bodily injury or property damage — and it's the gap that catches Colorado property managers off guard. Most E&O forms exclude bodily injury outright, so if a tenant or guest is hurt on a property you manage and names you, the policy simply doesn't respond.
The PBI Group form replaces that flat exclusion with a carve-back that can answer when your professional act or omission was a proximate cause of the injury. General Liability responds first if applicable — but these claims are often excluded under GL policies when they result from your professional services as a PM.
Say a Pueblo property manager doesn't act on a maintenance request and a tenant's property is damaged, or a Denver manager overlooks a step in an eviction and faces a wrongful-eviction claim. On the PBI Group form these are covered professional-services claims — and because defense costs are paid on top of your limit, the cost of the fight doesn't eat the money available to resolve it.
A real Colorado property-management claim
Two policies can carry the same limit and the same price, yet respond in opposite ways to the same lawsuit. These anonymized CO claims show the difference the policy form makes.
The secondhand stove
Denver, COA Denver property manager replaced a tenant's broken stove with a used unit bought secondhand — it arrived with broken glass, no working power cord, and a burner that wasn't properly seated, and it was installed without adequate testing. About two weeks later the tenant heated oil on a low setting; a defective burner ran hot regardless of the dial, the oil ignited, and the tenant suffered third-degree burns. He sued under the Colorado Premises Liability Act (and negligence), naming the management companies and the owner, with a jury demand. In active litigation.
On a standard form
Bodily injury is the first thing most E&O forms exclude — so a burn-injury suit against the manager reads as an automatic denial.
On the PBI Group form
The PBIG endorsement writes Property Manager into Real Estate Professional Services and replaces the bodily-injury exclusion with a carve-back: coverage where the manager's own professional act or omission was a proximate cause of the injury, excess over a required general-liability policy. Here proximate cause points right at the manager's own work — selecting a damaged unit and putting it in service untested — so the claim sits squarely inside what the carve-back covers. Defense costs are paid on top of the limit.
When you supply and install an appliance, that work carries professional exposure — a shortcut like fielding a damaged secondhand unit without a proper test can lead straight to a serious injury. Use qualified installers, test before authorizing use, and document it — and confirm your E&O carves tenant bodily injury back in.
Illustrative summary of a real claim; coverage always depends on the specific facts and policy terms.
General Liability for Colorado property managers
General Liability is the foundation layer for a Colorado property manager. It covers bodily injury and property damage arising from ordinary business operations — a visitor trips in your office — as well as personal and advertising injury.
Even if you don't have an office, it's still critical. Good E&O policies cover contingent bodily-injury / property-damage claims tied to your professional services as a PM, but only if you maintain General Liability coverage. There can be a fine line between an injury claim that's an ordinary business claim and one that results from your professional services, so it's important to have both in place and avoid a gap.
If you lease an office, your landlord probably requires GL coverage. PBI Group can often place GL for PMs alongside your E&O.
Property management cyber insurance
Property managers in Colorado handle exactly what attackers want — large, recurring movements of funds and a database of tenant personal and financial information. Phishing, ransomware, business-email compromise, and deceptive-invoice schemes are routine.
If a breach exposes tenant data — even data stored in a third-party system — the firm can face notification costs, regulatory exposure, and lawsuits. Cyber-liability insurance is the safety net that helps a Colorado property manager absorb the financial aftermath of an incident, and PBI Group places it as a standalone policy to adequately cover your risk (versus many cheap add-ons).
Why Colorado property managers choose PBI Group
PBI Group is a specialty agency built around real estate E&O — we don't dabble in this industry. We know, for example, that EPA audits are an issue for many property-management firms, so we've added EPA defense coverage to help hire an attorney for the negotiation.
PBI Group is an Affiliate Member of the National Association of Residential Property Managers (NARPM), and we regularly participate in NARPM trade shows and conventions — including the March 2025 Broker/Owner Conference in Colorado Springs.
We write Colorado property management through a Palomar-backed program — an A-rated carrier, admitted in Colorado — so the coverage behind the form is as solid as the wording.
Tell us how many doors you manage and the mix of single-family versus multi-family, and we'll show you exactly how the PBI Group form would respond to the claims Colorado property managers actually see — and where your current coverage may leave you exposed.
Colorado property management E&O — frequently asked questions
Do Colorado property managers need E&O insurance?
The Colorado Division of Real Estate (DORA) requires every active real estate licensee to carry errors & omissions (E&O) insurance. But meeting the minimum and being genuinely covered are two different things — especially for property managers. Be careful relying on a real estate E&O policy that simply adds PM as a cheap add-on.
What kind of insurance should a Colorado property management company have?
Most Colorado PM firms carry a stack: E&O (professional liability), General Liability (premises and business risks), Cyber Liability (wire fraud and tenant-data breach), and Commercial Property if you own your building. If you have employees, you should also consider Workers' Compensation (e.g., employee injury) and Crime (e.g., employee theft) coverage.
What are the most common property management claims in Colorado?
Fair-housing and discrimination allegations are the top E&O claim category for PM firms. Close behind are claims of tenant injury, sickness, emotional distress, and property damage tied to a PM's alleged negligence in professional services — such as delays in responding to work-order requests. Others include rent and security-deposit disputes and alleged failure to disclose pollutants like radon, asbestos, or lead.
Does my property management E&O cover the management of my own properties?
It depends. Many real estate / property-management E&O policies actually exclude the management of your own properties, or properties you own through a related LLC — because there's a higher risk of lawsuits when tenants see the owner and the licensed manager as the same party. At PBI Group, we cover professional-services claims related to the management of agent-owned properties, as long as those properties are managed through the firm we insure.
What is the cost for Property management insurance in Colorado?
In Colorado, property management insurance generally runs about $2,000–$3,000 per $1 million in revenue for a firm with a clean, claims-free history. Actual pricing is subject to your claims history and other factors — door count, portfolio mix, coverage limits, and deductible — so share your numbers and we'll quote Colorado coverage precisely.