Insurance for New Hampshire property managers
For a New Hampshire property manager, most claims start with the ordinary parts of the job: a repair request, a screening decision, a lease that runs out. Consider a Manchester eviction where a missed step turns into a wrongful-eviction claim, or a Nashua tenant who sues over a heating system you were slow to fix and calls it a failure to keep the unit livable. These aren't the losses most managers plan for, but they happen, and they are expensive to defend.
Whether you manage single-family homes around Dover, apartment communities in Concord, or property as one part of a full-service Portsmouth brokerage, three coverages carry most of the load: professional liability (E&O), general liability, and cyber. A standard sales-side E&O form usually isn't written for the management side, and that's where New Hampshire managers get caught short. New Hampshire's eviction rules and its prohibited-practice protections both shape how these disputes play out.
What insurance do New Hampshire property management companies need?
Most New Hampshire 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).
Common property management lawsuits in New Hampshire
The claim that catches New Hampshire managers off guard is bodily injury or property damage, because most E&O forms exclude bodily injury outright. If someone is hurt on a property you manage — a guest bitten by a tenant's dog, a worker who falls during a repair in Rochester — and you're named, a standard form doesn't respond.
The everyday disputes look tamer and still cost money. A manager moves too slowly on an eviction and faces a wrongful-eviction claim, or applies a deposit to charges the tenant contests. State law requires the deposit back within 30 days of the tenant leaving, and a form built for property-management work can answer those claims. Without it, the manager pays the defense and any settlement alone.
General Liability for New Hampshire property managers
General Liability sits at the base of the stack. It covers bodily injury and property damage from ordinary operations, like a visitor tripping at your office, plus personal and advertising injury. It matters even if you work from a home office: a good E&O form only picks up bodily-injury claims tied to your professional work when you carry GL underneath it, so the two are meant to sit together. If you lease office space in Manchester or anywhere else, your landlord likely requires GL anyway, and PBI Group can usually place it alongside your E&O.
Property management cyber insurance
New Hampshire property managers are a natural target for cybercrime, because you move rent and hold tenant financial and personal data. If that data is exposed, even through a third-party system, the firm can face notification costs, regulatory exposure, and lawsuits. The common attacks are familiar: phishing, ransomware, and fake-invoice or wire-fraud schemes that redirect a payment. Cyber insurance covers the aftermath, and PBI Group writes it as a standalone policy rather than a thin add-on.
What drives property management claims in New Hampshire
Winter is part of managing property in New Hampshire, and a slip on ice can put a manager in a lawsuit over a hazard they were supposed to control. Most E&O forms exclude bodily injury outright, so an injury claim lands in the gap unless general liability is sitting underneath it. Here is a real New Hampshire property-management claim that shows it.
Whose snow was it?
Laconia, NHThe insured managed a residential multi-family home in Laconia. On December 24, 2025, a tenant claims she slipped on snow and injured her arm at the property. Weeks later a letter of representation from a personal-injury firm arrived: it demanded preservation of all evidence — documents, electronic materials, social media, and specifically any surveillance footage from that December — warned that destruction could bring discovery sanctions, asked the company to state its position on liability, directed no contact with the claimant, and set how medical-payments benefits were to be routed through counsel. No lawsuit was filed and no dollar demand stated — the opening of a claim, not the end of one. The manager reported the letter to its carrier within days, and stated its position from the start: at this property, the landlord was not responsible for snow removal.
On a standard form
A standard E&O form flatly excludes bodily injury, so a slip-and-fall blamed on how the property was managed falls outside coverage entirely — even though the letter, not any lawsuit, is already the claim.
On the PBI Group form
The endorsement adds Property Manager to Real Estate Professional Services and replaces the blanket bodily-injury exclusion with a conditional carve-back: coverage can apply where the manager's professional act was a proximate cause of the injury, in excess of required underlying GL, and where no other policy applies — so a manager isn't bare when an injury is pinned on management. Claim Expenses sit under a separate limit, so engaging defense counsel at the letter stage costs nothing in coverage. What sits outside: the premises/bodily-injury claim itself runs first through the owner's general liability and premises coverage, the lease's snow-duty allocation is a landlord-tenant matter, and the owner's responsibility for the property stays the owner's. The carve-back only engages if the manager had actually undertaken winter maintenance and mishandled it.
Write snow-and-ice responsibility explicitly into every lease and management agreement — that allocation is the whole case. When the letter arrives, report it the same day, preserve everything it names (especially self-overwriting surveillance footage), and never answer the 'state your position on liability' question yourself — that is what defense counsel is for.
Illustrative summary of a real claim; coverage always depends on the specific facts and policy terms.
New Hampshire property management E&O — frequently asked questions
Does my real estate E&O cover property management in New Hampshire?
Usually not the way you need. Most E&O forms are written for the sales side, and the management work — leasing, rent handling, repairs, evictions, deposits — sits outside them. PBI Group writes E&O built for the management side.
How long do I have to return a security deposit in New Hampshire?
State law requires you to return the deposit, with interest where it applies, within 30 days of the tenant moving out. Deposit disputes are a common source of tenant claims, and a property-management E&O form is meant to answer them.
What covers a tenant or visitor injured at a property I manage?
General liability, not E&O. Most E&O forms exclude bodily injury, so a slip on ice or a fall during a repair is answered by GL — and a good E&O form only picks up injury tied to your professional work when GL sits underneath it. The two belong together.
What is the cost for Property management insurance in New Hampshire?
A New Hampshire property management firm can generally expect property management 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.