AMARILLO METRO · AMARILLO, TX

Landlord Insurance Agents in Amarillo, TX

0 licensed landlord insurance agents serving Amarillo and surrounding areas. Compare independent agencies specializing in landlord insurance.

Hail Risk · High
Flood Risk · Low
Wildfire Risk · Medium
Tornado Risk · High

Showing 0 advisors in Amarillo

Insurance in Amarillo, TX

Shopping for insurance in Amarillo means you'll have plenty of options, with 177 licensed agencies serving the Texas Panhandle region. Of these, 147 specialize in general lines coverage like auto and homeowners insurance, while 79 focus on life and health products. However, only 107 agencies currently maintain active licenses, so it's worth verifying an agency's status before you start the quote process. Living in the Texas Panhandle puts your property squarely in the path of some serious weather risks that directly impact your insurance needs. Amarillo sits in an active tornado corridor and experiences some of the highest hail frequencies in the state, making comprehensive coverage and adequate dwelling limits essential for homeowners. The area also faces moderate wildfire exposure, particularly during dry periods, which means you'll want to discuss whether your policy includes sufficient coverage for alternative living expenses if evacuation becomes necessary. Working with an independent agent makes particular sense in this market because they can shop multiple carriers to find coverage that specifically addresses Amarillo's unique risk profile. Different insurance companies price hail and wind coverage very differently in this part of Texas, and an experienced local agent will know which carriers offer the best combination of coverage and competitive rates for Panhandle weather conditions. This local expertise becomes invaluable when you're comparing policies that may look similar on paper but offer very different protection when severe weather strikes.

Further reading

Home & Property
How to Determine the Age of Your Roof for Insurance Purposes
Insurers ask about your roof age for good reason — and the answer affects your premium, your coverage terms, and your insurability. Here's how to find out what you're working with.
Home & Property
Can Your Home Insurance Company Drop You in Texas? What You Need to Know
Cancellation and non-renewal are two different things in Texas — with different rules, different timelines, and different options for homeowners.
Home & Property
What Credit Score Do You Need for Good Home Insurance in Texas?
Your credit score affects your homeowners insurance premium more than most Texans realize. Here's how it works, what scores matter, and what you can do about it.

Related searches in Amarillo, TX

Also in the Amarillo Metro

Browse licensed insurance agencies in nearby cities.

Popular Texas cities

Agencies are also available in Austin, Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, Round Rock, Georgetown, Plano, Fort Worth and other Texas cities.

Landlord Insurance FAQs — Amarillo, TX

What is landlord insurance and how is it different from homeowners?
Landlord insurance (sometimes called a dwelling fire or DP-3 policy) is designed for property you own but rent to others. It typically covers the physical dwelling, other structures, and loss of rental income after a covered loss, plus landlord liability. It generally does not cover a tenant's personal belongings — that's what renters insurance is for. Coverage forms and limits differ from a standard homeowners policy, so a rental property should almost always be written as landlord coverage rather than kept on an owner-occupied policy.
How much does landlord insurance cost in Amarillo?
Landlord insurance pricing in Amarillo depends on the property's replacement cost, age, roof age and type, construction, claims history, coverage form (basic, broad, or special), deductibles including wind/hail, liability limits, and whether the property is a single-family home, duplex, or small multi-unit. Occupancy — long-term lease vs. short-term rental — also affects pricing and eligibility. Comparing multiple carriers through an independent advisor is usually the most straightforward way to see competitive options for a specific property.
Does landlord insurance cover loss of rental income?
Most landlord policies include fair rental value or loss of rents coverage, which can help replace lost rental income while the property is being repaired after a covered loss. Coverage is usually limited to a set period and to the actual rent you would have collected. It doesn't apply to vacancies or non-payment of rent unrelated to a covered loss. Review the specific limit and time period on your policy so you understand exactly what would be paid after a fire, storm, or similar event.
Do I need liability coverage on a rental property?
Yes. Landlord liability coverage helps protect you if a tenant, guest, or other person is injured on the property and you're found responsible, or if there's covered damage to someone else's property. Even attentive landlords face liability exposure — slip-and-fall claims, dog bites, and injuries from property conditions are common examples. Many advisors also recommend an umbrella policy over landlord and personal policies to add a layer of liability protection above the underlying limits.
Should I require tenants to carry renters insurance?
Many landlords do require tenants to carry renters insurance with a minimum liability limit and to name the landlord as an additional interest. This helps protect the tenant's belongings, provides a liability policy the tenant can turn to first, and can reduce disputes after a loss. Requirements should be written into the lease, and some landlords ask for proof of coverage at signing and at renewal. An advisor can help you decide on reasonable minimum limits to require.
Does landlord insurance cover damage caused by tenants?
Standard landlord policies typically cover sudden, accidental damage from named perils — for example, an accidental kitchen fire — subject to the policy form and exclusions. They generally don't cover intentional damage, normal wear and tear, or maintenance issues, and pursuing a tenant for damage they caused is usually a legal matter handled through the lease and security deposit rather than the insurance policy. Review your policy form and exclusions carefully with an advisor before assuming a specific type of tenant-caused loss is covered.
Is a short-term rental covered by landlord insurance?
Not always. Many landlord and homeowners policies exclude or limit coverage for short-term rentals (for example, properties listed on platforms like Airbnb or Vrbo). Some carriers offer endorsements or specialized short-term rental policies designed for that exposure. If you rent your property nightly or weekly, disclose that to your advisor and confirm the policy form matches — otherwise a claim could be denied because the actual use didn't match what was underwritten.
Why use an independent advisor for landlord insurance?
Rental properties often don't fit neatly into a single carrier's appetite — roof age, prior claims, occupancy, and property type can all affect eligibility. Independent advisors work with multiple carriers, including some that specialize in landlord and rental exposures, and can compare coverage forms, deductibles, and liability limits across several markets. That comparison typically produces both better-matched coverage and a clearer sense of where a specific property is most competitively priced.
What should landlords in Amarillo consider?
Landlords in Amarillo should think about the property's replacement cost, roof age and wind/hail deductible, whether the policy covers loss of rental income and to what limit, appropriate liability limits (and whether an umbrella policy makes sense), and how short-term vs. long-term rental use is disclosed. Local carrier appetites vary by property age, prior claims, and occupancy. An independent advisor active in the Amarillo market can compare landlord policies from several carriers and flag coverage gaps specific to Texas rental properties.
Why work with a local landlord insurance advisor in Amarillo?
A local advisor familiar with the Amarillo rental market understands which carriers are writing landlord business, how each one treats older roofs, prior claims, and wind/hail exposure, and how tenant occupancy affects eligibility and pricing. Because independent advisors quote multiple insurance companies, they can compare coverage forms, deductibles, and liability limits side by side rather than presenting only one carrier's product. That comparison is especially useful for landlords with multiple properties or unusual occupancy situations.