Real estate E&O cost — frequently asked questions
How much does individual real estate E&O insurance cost?
Individual real estate E&O policies typically range from $100 to over $500 annually per agent, depending on the state, insurance company, and what coverages are included. Optional endorsements (bodily injury & property damage coverage, residential personal-interest coverage, increased limits) raise the price but are often worth the extra cost. Most-common in the 14 states that statutorily mandate E&O for licensees.
How much does firm-wide real estate E&O insurance cost?
Firm-wide E&O insurance prices off the brokerage's gross commission income (GCI), not headcount. Rough tiers: under $1M GCI ≈ $600–$2,000 annually for a $1M limit; $1M GCI ≈ $1,500–$4,000; $5M GCI ≈ $7,000–$15,000; $10M GCI ≈ $15,000–$30,000; $100M+ GCI can exceed $100,000 annually. Real number depends on claim history, transaction risk profile, deductible, and policy form.
What factors determine E&O insurance cost?
Six factors drive the bulk of E&O pricing: (1) gross commission income (firm) or transaction count (individual), (2) claims history — past incidents flag higher future risk, (3) transaction mix — higher percentages of dual-agency, foreclosures, luxury / multi-million-dollar homes, or agent-owned flips push premium up, (4) endorsements — defense outside the limits, prior-acts coverage, state-specific disclosure riders, (5) state — local real estate markets and litigation density vary widely, (6) policy structure — per-occurrence and aggregate limits, deductible, defense inside vs. outside the limits.
Is real estate E&O insurance worth the cost?
The cost of E&O should be seen as an investment in the long-term stability of your agency. E&O claims can be six-figure events — budgeting a fraction of a percent of revenue annually for E&O is the difference between surviving a lawsuit and going out of business. Several states mandate E&O for licensure; most franchises require it; every major lender and title company expects proof of coverage as a condition of doing business. Cutting corners on coverage for a cheap premium can cost hundreds of thousands later when a denied claim leaves the brokerage personally exposed.
Which states require real estate agents to carry E&O insurance?
Currently 14 states statutorily require real estate licensees to carry E&O insurance: Colorado, Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, and Wyoming. State-sponsored group policies are common in mandate states but are usually rudimentary — most brokerages with more than 10 agents should consider a firm-wide policy with broader protection.
Are individual E&O policies enough, or do I need a firm policy?
Individual policies cover the agent personally for claims arising from their own work. They typically do not extend full coverage to the brokerage as a legal entity, the brokerage's ownership, or to the work of other agents in the firm. Brokers carrying individual policies usually need to add a firm excess policy to fill the gaps — which raises total cost relative to a firm-wide policy from the start. For multi-agent brokerages, a firm-wide E&O policy is almost always the better economic and coverage choice.