Building an ADU is a serious investment. Most run $100,000 to $500,000+ to construct, and protecting that capital with the right policy is not optional. This guide explains what coverage you actually need, what it costs in 2026, and the common mistakes that leave owners exposed.
Does Your Homeowner's Policy Cover Your ADU?
The Short Answer: Probably Not Fully
Most standard homeowner's insurance policies provide limited coverage for "other structures" on your property. The Insurance Information Institute notes the default is typically 10% of your dwelling coverage, which may handle a basic shed or detached garage. It is unlikely to be adequate for a fully built-out ADU.
Example:
- Your home is insured for $500,000
- "Other structures" coverage = 10% = $50,000
- Your ADU cost $250,000 to build
- Coverage gap: $200,000
What Standard Policies Typically Cover
- Dwelling coverage: Your primary home only
- Other structures (10%): May partially cover ADU structure
- Personal liability: May extend to ADU-related incidents
- Contents: Does NOT cover tenant's belongings
What Standard Policies Typically Do NOT Cover
- Full replacement cost of the ADU
- Rental income loss if the ADU is damaged
- Tenant-caused damage
- ADU-specific liability (slip and fall in ADU)
- Builder's risk during construction
Insurance Options for ADU Owners
Option 1: Increase Your Homeowner's Policy
- What it does: Increases "other structures" coverage to match ADU value
- Cost: $300-$800/year additional premium
- Best for: ADUs used by family members (not rented)
- Limitation: Does not cover rental-specific risks
Option 2: ADU Insurance Rider/Endorsement
- What it does: Adds specific ADU coverage to your existing policy
- Cost: $500-$1,500/year
- Best for: ADU owners who want simple, single-policy coverage
- Covers: Structure, liability, some rental income protection
Option 3: Separate Landlord/Rental Dwelling Policy
- What it does: Independent policy specifically for the rental ADU
- Cost: $800-$2,000/year
- Best for: ADU owners who rent the unit (long-term or short-term)
- Covers: Structure, liability, rental income loss, tenant damage
Option 4: Builder's Risk Insurance (During Construction)
- What it does: Covers the ADU during the construction phase
- Cost: 1-5% of construction cost
- Duration: Construction period only
- Covers: Theft, vandalism, weather damage, fire during construction
- Note: Your builder should carry their own builder's risk policy. Verify the coverage amount and your status as additional insured. The NAIC builder's risk guidance from 2024 outlines what should be on the certificate.
Coverage You Need If You Rent Your ADU
| Coverage Type | What It Protects | Typical Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Dwelling/structure | ADU building replacement cost | $400-$1,200/year |
| Liability | Injury claims from tenants/guests | $200-$500/year |
| Loss of rental income | Income lost if ADU is uninhabitable | $100-$300/year |
| Fair housing liability | Discrimination claim defense | Included in landlord policy |
| Total rental coverage | $800-$2,000/year |
Short-Term Rental (Airbnb) Insurance
If you rent your ADU through Airbnb or similar platforms, the gap between platform coverage and what you actually need is wide. Airbnb's AirCover for Hosts policy (updated 2024) provides $1 million in host damage protection and $1 million in host liability insurance.
It still leaves significant gaps. A dedicated short-term rental insurance policy costs $1,500-$3,000/year and covers guest injuries, property damage, and business interruption. Many standard landlord policies explicitly exclude short-term rentals — verify before you list.
See our guide on ADU short-term rental income.
Common Insurance Mistakes
Mistake 1: Assuming Your Homeowner's Policy is Enough
Without specific ADU coverage, you can face a six-figure gap between your coverage and the ADU's replacement cost. Always verify your coverage limits with your insurance agent.
Mistake 2: Not Requiring Renter's Insurance
Require tenants to carry renter's insurance ($15-$30/month). This covers their personal belongings and provides liability coverage that protects both them and you. The NAIC 2023 consumer guide on renter's insurance is worth sending tenants at lease signing.
Mistake 3: Under-Insuring Replacement Cost
Insure the ADU for its full replacement cost, not its construction cost. Replacement cost accounts for increased material and labor prices since construction.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics Producer Price Index for construction (2024) showed residential construction inputs climbed nearly 40% from 2020 through 2024. An ADU built in 2021 could cost 30-40% more to rebuild today.
Mistake 4: Skipping Loss of Rental Income Coverage
If your ADU becomes uninhabitable due to fire, storm, or other covered event, loss of rental income coverage replaces your monthly rent during repairs. At $2,000/month rent, a 6-month repair could cost you $12,000 without this coverage.
Mistake 5: Not Updating After Construction
Many homeowners build an ADU and forget to update their insurance. Contact your insurance agent immediately after ADU completion to add appropriate coverage. The California Department of Insurance ADU guidance (2023) recommends notification within 30 days of certificate of occupancy.
How ADU Insurance Costs Compare to Income
| ADU Rent | Annual Income | Insurance Cost | Insurance as % of Income |
|---|---|---|---|
| $1,500/month | $18,000 | $1,000 | 5.6% |
| $2,000/month | $24,000 | $1,200 | 5.0% |
| $2,500/month | $30,000 | $1,500 | 5.0% |
| $3,000/month | $36,000 | $1,800 | 5.0% |
Insurance typically costs 4-6% of annual rental income. That is a reasonable expense for protecting an investment worth $100,000-$500,000+.
Tax Deductibility
If your ADU is rented, insurance premiums are fully tax-deductible as a rental expense on Schedule E. The IRS Publication 527 (Residential Rental Property, 2024) lays out the rules: insurance, depreciation, repairs, and management fees all reduce taxable rental income.
This reduces the effective cost by your marginal tax rate (typically 22-37% for most homeowners). See our ADU property tax guide for more tax considerations.
State Regulatory Context
ADU rules — and the insurance considerations that follow — vary widely by state. California's AB 976 (2023) extended owner-occupancy exemptions for ADUs through 2025, which affects how some carriers underwrite the risk. Oregon's HB 2001 (2019) opened middle housing statewide and pushed several major carriers to release dedicated ADU products.
If you build an ADU as a rental, your insurance contract should match the legal use approved on your permit. Ask the agent to read the certificate of occupancy.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need insurance during ADU construction?
Yes. Builder's risk insurance covers the ADU during construction. Your contractor should carry this policy, but verify the coverage amount and your status as an additional insured. Some homeowner's policies also offer construction coverage riders.
Can I deduct ADU insurance costs on my taxes?
If the ADU is rented, yes — insurance premiums are deductible as a rental expense on Schedule E. If the ADU is used personally (family member, not rented), it is not deductible.
What happens if my tenant causes damage to the ADU?
Your landlord policy covers damage to the structure. The tenant's security deposit covers minor damage. For significant damage, your policy pays for repairs (minus deductible), and your insurance company may pursue the tenant for reimbursement (subrogation).
Do I need umbrella liability insurance?
If you rent your ADU, an umbrella policy ($1-2 million for $200-$400/year) provides additional liability protection beyond your landlord policy limits. This is highly recommended, especially if you have significant assets to protect.
Will my insurance increase if I add an ADU?
Yes, your overall insurance costs will increase. The increase is modest relative to the value of the investment. Expect $500-$2,000/year in additional premium, depending on coverage type and ADU value.
Related Reading
- ADU Insurance and Liability Coverage Cost
- ADU HVAC System Options
- ADU Rent to Own Arrangements
- Common ADU Construction Delays
- Cover Homes ADU Review
Related Reading from our editorial team:
- Top 10 Prefab ADU Companies Compared: Studio Shed, Cover, Connect Homes (2026)
- Top 10 Best States for Building ADUs Compared: Laws, Permits, Incentives (2026)
- Top 10 ADU Financing & Loan Options Compared: HELOC, Construction Loans, CalHFA (2026)
- Top 10 ADU Design Styles Compared: Modern, Craftsman, Scandinavian, Tiny (2026)
- Top 10 US Cities for ADU Rental Income Potential Compared (2026)
-- The ADU Finder Team