Types of Real Estate Insurance in Florida
There are 3 main types of insurance for real estate:
Although errors and omissions insurance is not mandated by Florida, E&O insurance is often required by another authority such as your real estate franchise or bank partners. Regardless of whether it is actually mandatory, common sense or past experiences often make signing up for errors and omissions insurance in Florida an obvious choice.
What drives E&O claims in Florida
Most Florida E&O claims trace back to a handful of recurring situations: failure to disclose a known problem — the wrong HOA, an undisclosed leasing ban, condo-reserve or special-assessment exposure, hurricane and flood history; misrepresentation of condition, square footage, or what a community's documents actually allow; breach of fiduciary duty and undisclosed dual representation; and the condo-reserve disputes that followed the Champlain Towers reforms. They surface wherever Florida brokerages work — Miami-Dade and Broward, Orlando, Tampa Bay, Jacksonville, Naples and the Gulf Coast. Florida has effectively ended the old buyer-beware rule in residential sales, so the agent who didn't disclose is personally exposed — and the legal defense is usually the biggest cost, even when the agent did nothing wrong. Two policies at the same limit and price can respond in opposite ways; the difference is the wording. Here is what that looks like in two real Florida claims.
The wrong homeowners' association
Bradenton, FLA listing brokerage represented the seller of a $485,000 Bradenton home. The buyers were investors whose whole plan was to rent it out. The seller's standard Florida Comprehensive Rider named a homeowners' association whose covenants allowed leasing — the buyers pulled that association's documents, confirmed it, and closed. After closing they discovered the home actually belonged to a separate, similarly named association governing their phase, and that one prohibits leasing outright. Their attorney demanded $39,600 — a year's rent at $3,300/month — and threatened suit for damages, fees, and costs.
On a standard form
A blown-disclosure demand is easy to frame as misrepresentation that edges toward intent — and on a weaker form a dishonesty argument can be raised to contest the defense on the pleadings.
On the PBI Group form
Getting a disclosure right is core Real Estate Professional Services, so a negligent misrepresentation is a covered Wrongful Act, not a gap. The PBI Group form's dishonesty exclusion applies only once intentional wrongdoing is finally adjudicated, so the negligence theory is defended throughout; defense costs are paid on top of the limit; and because the loss is the buyers' lost rental income — not the brokerage's commission — the fees/commissions exclusion doesn't apply.
Where multiple similarly named associations govern different phases, verify the controlling HOA against the recorded documents for that specific parcel — not the development's name. When a disclosure turns out wrong, what protects you is a form that treats it as covered professional work and keeps defending the negligence theory.
Illustrative summary of a real claim; coverage always depends on the specific facts and policy terms.
The agent on both sides of the table
North Miami, FLA divorced couple owned a North Miami waterfront home listed near $2.15M and appraised at $2.1M. On their listing agent's advice they accepted $1,625,000 — about $500,000 under appraisal. According to the demand, the buyer was an entity the agent had formed weeks earlier and managed, which she never disclosed. Fifteen months later the property resold for $2,675,000, with the same agent earning a commission. After a Realtor-board ethics finding, the seller demanded $500,000 for breach of the fiduciary duties of loyalty and good faith — and sued.
On a standard form
A demand soaked in self-dealing and intentional-disloyalty language is exactly what a dishonesty or personal-profit exclusion is written to catch — and many market forms let the carrier raise it early to contest the defense outright.
On the PBI Group form
A listing agent's duties of loyalty, disclosure, and advice sit inside Real Estate Professional Services, and the claim is also pleaded as negligence. The PBI Group form's dishonesty exclusion bites only on a final adjudication, finding, or admission of intentional wrongdoing — so until then the company keeps defending the negligence theory, with defense costs paid on top of the limit. (Any recovery characterized as giving back a personal profit is treated separately from covered Damages.)
Dual representation isn't the problem — undisclosed dual representation is. What protects an agent when self-dealing is alleged is a form that keeps defending the professional-negligence theory rather than walking away at the first mention of bad faith. Ask exactly when your dishonesty and personal-profit exclusions are triggered.
Illustrative summary of a real claim; coverage always depends on the specific facts and policy terms.
Florida real estate E&O — frequently asked questions
Is E&O insurance required for real estate agents in Florida?
No. Florida Statutes Chapter 475 doesn't mandate E&O. But F.S. § 475.25 holds the supervising broker responsible for every agent's misconduct, which makes coverage effectively non-optional for any brokerage with more than one agent — and lenders, title companies, and franchises all require proof of coverage before doing business. Florida REALTORS® recommends continuous coverage with no gaps.
What are the most common E&O claims in Florida?
Failure to disclose a known problem (the wrong HOA, an undisclosed leasing ban, condo-reserve or special-assessment exposure, hurricane and flood history), misrepresentation of condition or square footage, breach of fiduciary duty and undisclosed dual representation, and the condo-reserve disputes that followed the Champlain Towers reforms. Defense costs are usually the largest expense — even when the agent did nothing wrong.
Does my Florida E&O policy cover condo-reserve / Champlain-era disclosure claims?
It depends on the form. Since the 2021 Champlain Towers South collapse, Florida courts have expanded the disclosure duty around condo reserve-study adequacy, pending litigation, and special assessments. PBI Group's Florida program includes a condo/HOA reserve-disclosure endorsement for coastal-condo markets; many generic policies sub-limit or exclude these claims. Check the exclusions before assuming you're covered.
If a client sues me for fraud or self-dealing in Florida, am I on my own?
Not on a well-written form. Most Florida suits plead fraud or breach of fiduciary duty alongside negligence. The PBI Group form's dishonesty exclusion applies only once intentional wrongdoing is finally adjudicated — so the negligence theory keeps getting defended, and defense costs are paid on top of your limit.
What E&O limits should a Florida brokerage carry?
A common baseline is $1M per claim / $2M aggregate, stepping up to $1M / $3M for Miami-Dade and other coastal firms with material condo or international volume, with hurricane/flood and condo-reserve endorsements added. The right configuration depends on your markets and transaction mix.
What is the cost for E&O real estate insurance in Florida?
In Florida, E&O real estate insurance generally runs about $2,000–$3,000 per $1 million in revenue for a firm with a clean, claims-free history. Actual pricing is subject to your claims history and other factors — coverage limits, deductible, and the kinds of transactions you handle — so share your numbers and we'll quote Florida coverage precisely.
Florida requirements & coverage detail
The fine print — what counts as compliant coverage in Florida, the statutes behind it, and how our policy form responds. Click any section to expand; sources are cited.
Florida doesn't require E&O — but it's effectively required
Florida Statutes Chapter 475 governs real estate licensure but contains no E&O mandate. The pressure comes from a different direction. Under F.S. § 475.25, a supervising broker is held responsible for every agent's misconduct — which makes coverage effectively non-optional for any brokerage with more than one agent. On top of that, lenders, title companies, and the national franchises all require proof of coverage before they'll do business, and Florida REALTORS® urges continuous coverage with no gaps.
The other half of the picture is what Florida courts expect of agents. Florida has effectively ended the old buyer-beware rule in residential sales: sellers and their agents owe an affirmative duty to disclose known material defects, and an agent who stays silent can be personally liable. That combination — no statutory mandate, but real exposure on every transaction — is exactly why the policy form has to actually respond.
One limit worth knowing: E&O answers the civil-defense side. DBPR fines remain personally owed and aren't covered by any E&O policy.
How Florida's market drives premium
Florida has the largest licensed real estate population in the country — roughly 280,000–300,000 active licensees — and three metros set the premium map:
| Metro | Median price (2025) | Key E&O drivers |
|---|---|---|
| Miami-Dade / Broward | $450K–$550K+ | Hurricane and flood disclosure, condo-defect litigation, international-buyer transactions |
| Orlando | $320K–$400K | Rapid growth, short-term-rental disclosure, HOA reserve depletion |
| Tampa Bay | $350K–$450K | Coastal-flood exposure, condo-reserve failures, aging-infrastructure water-intrusion |
What pushes Florida premiums up: hurricane and flood-disclosure complexity in coastal counties; the surge in condo and HOA reserve and special-assessment litigation since the 2021 Champlain Towers South collapse; the country's largest short-term-rental market; and foreign-buyer transactions concentrated in South Florida. A common Florida configuration is $1M per claim / $2M aggregate, stepping up to $1M / $3M for Miami-Dade firms with material coastal or international volume, with hurricane/flood and condo-reserve endorsements added.
How PBI Group's form is broader where it counts
Two Florida policies can look identical on the quote sheet and respond in opposite ways. PBI Group's form is written to be broader exactly where Florida claims land:
- Disclosure work is core covered service — a negligent misrepresentation on a disclosure (the wrong HOA, a missed leasing ban) is a covered Wrongful Act, not a gap.
- A fraud or self-dealing allegation doesn't end your defense — the dishonesty exclusion applies only on a final adjudication, so the negligence theory stays defended.
- Property management is covered, and bodily-injury claims tied to your professional work can be covered, where standard forms exclude them outright.
- Open-house and lock-box losses are carved back into coverage rather than swept away by the property-damage exclusion.
- Defense costs are paid on top of your limit, so a document-heavy disclosure or condo fight doesn't drain the money meant to settle it.
- Florida-specific endorsements — hurricane and flood disclosure, condo/HOA reserve-disclosure, and short-term-rental — built for this market.
The wording is the product.