Condo Insurance in British Columbia
A condo insurance policy in British Columbia runs an estimated C$0 a year. That number is a representative estimate for comparison, not a quote: your actual premium is driven by your unit, the master policy gap you need to fill, and your coverage limits, which is why comparing carriers matters.
*Illustrative figure for comparison, not a quote. Top local risk: wildfire & earthquake.
British Columbia's dominant exposure is wildfire & earthquake, and that risk is a big reason condo insurance is priced and underwritten the way it is locally. Insurers weigh wildfire & earthquake history when they set rates and decide what to cover, so it is worth confirming your policy actually responds to it before you buy.
About 32% of British Columbia's households rent rather than own, across roughly 5.7M residents — context that shapes how much condo insurance the province buys and how carriers compete here. British Columbia’s Residential Tenancy Act limits security deposits to half a month’s rent. Confirm current requirements with British Columbia's insurance regulator before you rely on them.
Coverage that matters here.
Interior / walls-in
Pays to repair or replace flooring, drywall, fixtures, and built-in improvements inside your unit after a covered loss.
Personal property
Reimburses furniture, clothing, electronics, and other belongings damaged or stolen up to your chosen personal property limit.
Liability
Covers legal defense and damages if a guest is injured inside your unit or you accidentally damage a neighbor's property.
Loss assessment
Pays your share of a special assessment levied by the condo association when a covered loss to common property exceeds the master policy limit.
What a policy responds to.
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Condo Insurance in British Columbia, answered.
How much is condo insurance in British Columbia?
A representative condo insurance premium in British Columbia runs around C$0 per year. This is an estimate for comparison, not a quote — your actual rate depends on the property, coverage limits, and insurer. British Columbia’s Residential Tenancy Act limits security deposits to half a month’s rent.
What does the condo association's master policy cover?
The master policy covers the building structure, common areas, and shared systems like the roof and hallways. Depending on whether it is a bare-walls, single-entity, or all-in policy, it may or may not cover original fixtures inside your unit. Your HO-6 policy fills whatever gaps the master policy leaves inside your walls.
What is a loss assessment and why do I need coverage for it?
A loss assessment is a charge the condo association bills each unit owner when a covered loss to common property — say a fire in the lobby — exceeds the master policy limit. Loss assessment coverage in your HO-6 policy pays your share of that bill, up to your selected limit, so the cost does not come out of pocket.
Does condo insurance cover water damage from an upstairs neighbor?
If water leaks from your upstairs neighbor's unit and damages your floors or walls, your HO-6 policy can cover the repairs to your unit. You would file under your own policy and your insurer may seek reimbursement from the neighbor's carrier if they were negligent.