Holding rentals in an LLC is standard practice for good reason: it separates the property's liabilities from your personal assets. But the insurance policy has to match the structure. An LLC on the deed with an individual on the policy is the most common entity mistake we see — and it creates problems in both directions.
Why the named insured matters
The named insured is who the policy protects and pays. Insurance follows insurable interest: the named insured must be the party that owns the risk. If the deed says "Maple Street Holdings LLC" and the policy says "Jane Smith," then strictly speaking the policy covers someone who doesn't own the building — grounds for a dispute or denial at exactly the wrong moment. And in a liability suit, a policy that names you personally does nothing to keep the claim on the LLC's side of the wall you built.
Three common mistakes
- The quiet quitclaim. You buy in your name, insure in your name, then deed the property into an LLC for asset protection — and never update the policy. The named insured no longer owns the property.
- The wrong entity. Investors with several LLCs put the policy under the holding company while a subsidiary owns the deed, or under the property manager's entity. Match the deed, not the org chart.
- The personal umbrella assumption. Personal umbrella policies typically exclude business activities — they don't backstop an LLC's rental liability. Business-grade liability on the landlord policy is what carries that weight.
Rule of thumb: whoever signs the deed signs the policy. Any time title moves — purchase, LLC transfer, trust, 1031 exchange — the insurance gets updated the same week.
Named insured vs. additional insured vs. additional interest
- Named insured — owns the policy, files claims, receives payment. This is the deed holder: your LLC.
- Additional insured — gets liability protection under your policy without owning it. Common for property managers, capital partners, or yourself personally alongside the LLC.
- Additional interest / mortgagee — gets notified of changes and paid on property losses up to their stake. This is your lender's slot.
Getting these roles right costs nothing — they're standard endorsements — but mixing them up means someone who needed protection has only a notification, or vice versa.
Where lenders fit
If the LLC borrowed the money, the lender will require the policy to name the LLC as insured and themselves as mortgagee — and they'll check, both at closing and at renewal. DSCR and hard-money lenders are strict about this because their collateral is the building. Getting the structure right up front means certificates go out once instead of bouncing back for corrections while your closing waits.
The alignment checklist
- Pull the deed for each property and note the exact legal owner name.
- Pull each policy's declarations page and compare the named insured. Exact match, including "LLC."
- Fix mismatches now — it's an endorsement, not a new policy, when done proactively.
- Add yourself as additional insured if you personally manage the property.
- Re-check after every title change — refinances and 1031s are where alignment quietly breaks.
Hold your rentals in an LLC?
Lumin writes policies to LLCs, trusts, and partnerships every day — named insureds, additional insureds, and mortgagees structured correctly the first time.
Explore landlord insuranceThis guide is for general information and isn't insurance or legal advice for your specific situation. Entity structuring questions belong with your attorney; a licensed Lumin agent can align the policy once the structure is set.