Insurance for Washington property managers
For a Washington property manager, most claims start with routine decisions: a maintenance ticket, a screening rule, an applicant with a voucher. Consider a Seattle tenant who blames unaddressed mold for a run of health problems and sues over how the unit was maintained, or a Tacoma applicant turned away for paying with a housing voucher, which Washington treats as unlawful source-of-income discrimination. Neither is the loss most managers plan for, and both are costly to defend.
Whether you manage houses around Olympia, apartment communities in Spokane, or property as part of a full-service Bellevue 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 Washington's tenant-protection laws make that gap easy to fall into.
What insurance do Washington property management companies need?
Most Washington 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 Washington
The claim that surprises Washington managers is bodily injury or property damage, because most E&O forms exclude bodily injury on its face. If a tenant or visitor is hurt at a property you manage and your name is on the complaint, a standard form won't respond.
The routine disputes are just as real under Washington law. Washington's landlord-tenant law sets a high habitability bar, a firm deadline to itemize and return deposits, and just-cause limits on ending a tenancy — and fair-housing testers actively audit screening and listings across the state. A form written for property-management work can answer a habitability or deposit claim; a sales-side form often can't.
General Liability for Washington property managers
General Liability is the base layer. It pays for bodily injury and property damage from everyday operations — a visitor who trips at your office, a vendor hurt on site — along with personal and advertising injury. It matters even without a storefront: a good E&O form only reaches bodily-injury claims connected to your professional work when GL sits under it, so the two belong together. Landlords leasing you office space usually require GL as well, and PBI Group can place it next to your E&O.
Property management cyber insurance
Washington property managers make an easy mark for cybercrime, since you route rent payments and store tenant financial and personal records. A breach — even one that starts in a vendor's system — can bring notification costs, regulatory exposure, and lawsuits. The usual methods are phishing, ransomware, and fake-invoice or wire-transfer fraud that quietly reroutes a payment. Cyber insurance handles the cleanup, and PBI Group places it as its own policy instead of a thin endorsement.
What drives property management claims in Washington
The claims that hit Washington property managers look different from sales-side claims — and they scale with the number of doors you manage. The recurring drivers: fair housing (Washington's law is among the broadest, and testers actively audit listings), habitability and failure-to-maintain, security-deposit handling, eviction under the state's just-cause rules, and — the one most standard forms simply exclude — bodily injury on a managed property. The difference between a defended claim and a denial is the policy form. Here is a real Washington property-management claim that shows it.
The blanket policy a tester found
Port Angeles, WAA property manager screened applicants under a policy where any felony conviction meant automatic denial. No one was ever turned away — instead a fair-housing organization sent testers posing as applicants, who were told a felony meant denial. The organization filed a HUD complaint under the Fair Housing Act on a disparate-impact theory: that a blanket criminal-record ban disproportionately excludes protected groups without business necessity, where individualized assessment was the less-discriminatory alternative. HUD docketed it, made no merits finding, and invited conciliation. The matter was defended and closed with no indemnity paid.
On a standard form
Many E&O forms exclude discrimination claims outright — so a fair-housing complaint against the manager reads as an automatic denial.
On the PBI Group form
Setting and applying screening criteria is covered Real Estate Professional Services for a property manager named through the PBIG endorsement, and the form carves fair-housing claims back into coverage up to a sublimit, with a definition broad enough to reach federal, state, and local law. That coverage is structured to reach a claim brought by testers or an organization, not just a rejected applicant, and it engages from the HUD-complaint stage before any lawsuit — with Claim Expenses under a separate limit outside the loss. The fair-housing sublimit, any civil penalty, and non-monetary policy-change relief are the edges to understand going in.
Blanket screening rules are where fair-housing risk concentrates. Assess applicants case by case, document the business reasons, and train staff on what they can say — and confirm your E&O carves fair-housing claims, including tester-based ones, back in.
Illustrative summary of a real claim; coverage always depends on the specific facts and policy terms.
Washington property management E&O — frequently asked questions
Does Washington require property managers to carry E&O insurance?
Washington doesn't impose a blanket E&O mandate, but state rules require any broker handling client funds to carry E&O or post a $50,000 surety bond — and most third-party property managers handle trust funds, so the coverage is effectively required. Beyond the rule, the state's tenant-protection laws make PM claims more likely, not less.
Why does Washington's landlord-tenant law matter for my insurance?
Washington's landlord-tenant law sets strict habitability, deposit, and eviction rules, and Washington bans source-of-income discrimination statewide. Fair-housing testers actively audit screening and listings. Those rules turn everyday decisions — a screening policy, a repair timeline, a deposit deduction — into potential claims, and a PM-specific E&O form is written to respond to them.
Does a sales-side E&O policy cover Washington property management?
Usually not completely. Standard real estate E&O is built for listing and selling; the management side often falls into exclusions or thin coverage. PBI Group writes the form so property-management work is covered professional activity, and pairs it with the general liability a good form needs to answer bodily-injury claims.
What is the cost for Property management insurance in Washington?
For property management insurance in Washington, 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 the size and mix of your book.