Types of Real Estate Insurance in Idaho
There are 3 main types of insurance for real estate:
Errors and omissions insurance for real estate agents in Idaho is mandatory. Idaho is one of 13 mandatory states where typically each agent will obtain their own individual agent-based policy plus an excess policy purchased by the brokerage. At PBI Group we believe there is a better way, one where the agency buys one policy that covers both the agents and the company. This 1 policy has broader coverages and better protection than what is provided by have disparate agent policies topped off by an excess policy.
What drives E&O claims in Idaho
Two policies can carry the same limit and the same price, yet respond in opposite ways to the same lawsuit. These anonymized ID claims show the difference the policy form makes.
What the fresh paint was hiding
Emmett, IDA listing agent represented two sisters who had inherited an Emmett, Idaho home after their brother's death and had never lived in it; the property was refreshed before listing — new flooring, cabinetry, and bathrooms, marketed as "turnkey" — and sold for $630,000 in late summer 2025. On the seller's disclosure, the sisters answered "Do Not Know" to the moisture, water-intrusion, and mold questions, and the buyers' pre-closing inspection flagged no mold. During a post-closing renovation the buyers found mold and wood rot behind the new finishes — the subfloor so unsecured a contractor fell through it — plus electrical work they said would not pass code. Their demand letter alleged the refresh was done to hide known problems, that the disclosure was false and the listing misleading, and sought repair costs; they claimed the agent "may have known" and filed a complaint against her with the Idaho Real Estate Commission. The agent reported the matter to her carrier as a potential claim before any suit, stated she had no knowledge of the damage, and the matter remains open.
On a standard form
A demand that the refresh was a deliberate cover-up and that the agent "may have known" gives a weaker form two openings: argue the conduct toward intentional concealment to contest the defense on the pleadings, or recast a mold matter as a pollution/environmental claim outside the grant. Where defense costs also erode the limit, that fight burns the dollars meant to resolve the claim.
On the PBI Group form
An agent's handling of the seller's disclosure and the listing representations is core Real Estate Professional Services, so a claim that she negligently failed to discover or disclose the condition — or that "turnkey" was misleading — is a covered Wrongful Act analyzed as professional liability. The PBI Group form's dishonesty exclusion applies only on final adjudication of intentional wrongdoing, so the agent is defended through the negligence theory even with concealment alleged, and it would not indemnify a knowing concealment only if that were ever actually proven. The form also defends the Idaho Real Estate Commission complaint — a regulatory proceeding that puts the license itself at risk — with Claim Expenses under a separate limit that doesn't erode the dollars for loss, and because she reported the circumstance early on a claims-made basis, coverage for what follows is secured. Two edges are worth stating plainly: the alleged concealment and the remediation cost sit principally with the non-occupant sellers and the property, not the agent, and exactly how a mold claim is treated under any given form is worth confirming — but on non-occupant sellers, a "do not know" disclosure, and a clean inspection, the agent's no-knowledge defense is strong.
A pre-sale refresh that later reveals hidden damage draws suspicion onto everyone who touched the deal, so protect yourself before and after: ask sellers direct questions about recent work and why it was done, go easy on superlatives like "turnkey," and document what you were told and what you observed — then report any first notice or board complaint to your carrier as a potential claim immediately, because early reporting is what secures the defense. What stands behind you is a form that treats disclosure handling as covered professional work and defends both the claim and your license, with defense costs outside the limit.
Illustrative summary of a real claim; coverage always depends on the specific facts and policy terms.
Idaho real estate E&O — frequently asked questions
Does Idaho require real estate agents to carry E&O insurance?
Yes. Idaho Code § 54-2013 mandates E&O for every active real estate licensee — brokers, salespersons, and brokerage entities — at minimum $100,000 per occurrence and $100,000 annual aggregate. Critically, defense costs sit OUTSIDE the limits per § 54-2013(3), so the statutory floor actually means $100K defense + $100K indemnity. License goes inactive automatically without proof of coverage.
What's the minimum E&O coverage required by Idaho law?
$100,000 per occurrence and $100,000 annual aggregate (Idaho Code § 54-2013(2)). Defense costs are paid OUTSIDE these limits per § 54-2013(3) — eroded-limits policies are not permitted. The deductible is capped at the IREC-approved group policy level. PBI Group's Idaho program offers higher limits ($1M/$2M typical) for brokerages with material vacation-rental, agricultural, or water-rights exposure.
What happens if my Idaho E&O policy lapses?
Per Idaho Code § 54-2013(6), the license goes inactive immediately — no grace period. IREC's audit policy enforces via random renewal checks; non-response triggers $250–$1,000 fines. Reactivation requires submitting current proof of compliant coverage. The cleanest fix: enroll in IREC's group plan (RISC/CRES) or maintain continuous independent coverage that meets the Idaho minima with prior-acts protection.
What is the cost for E&O real estate insurance in Idaho?
A Idaho brokerage can generally expect E&O real estate insurance to cost about $2,000–$3,000 per $1 million in revenue with no claims on record. Your premium is subject to claims history and other factors, so the exact number depends on your specifics.
Idaho requirements & coverage detail
The fine print — what counts as compliant coverage in Idaho, the statutes behind it, and how our policy form responds. Click any section to expand; sources are cited.
Idaho mandates E&O — what the statute actually says
Idaho Code § 54-2013 requires every active real estate licensee to maintain E&O coverage as a license condition. Three things make Idaho's mandate distinct from peer states:
1. Defense costs sit OUTSIDE the limit (§ 54-2013(3)). Most state mandates are silent on defense treatment — Idaho explicitly prohibits eroded limits. A $100K policy actually pays $100K in defense + $100K in indemnity.
2. Coverage applies to ALL licensees — salespersons, brokers, and brokerage entities. Brokerages can satisfy the mandate via group plans procured from IREC-approved providers (IDAPA 24.30.01.117–122), or independently with proof of equivalent coverage.
3. Auto-inactivation enforcement (§ 54-2013(6)). Failure to maintain proof means license goes inactive immediately — no grace period, no warning. Audit policy enforces via random renewal checks, $250–$1,000 fines, and pulled licenses until reinstated.
The mandate covers every transaction-related activity contemplated under Title 54, Chapter 20 — which is essentially every act a licensed Idaho broker performs.
What IREC enforcement looks like in practice
IREC publishes annual disciplinary data. The 2023 numbers (most recent verifiable):
- 147 complaints filed against licensees, 76% closed (112 cases)
- 42 disciplinary actions taken — fines on 55%, suspensions on 24%, revocations on 7%, mandatory continuing education on 14%
The top allegation categories are squarely in the E&O coverage zone:
| Allegation | Share |
|---|---|
| Agency disclosure failures | 28% |
| Misrepresentation / fraud | 22% |
| Contract non-performance | 18% |
| Trust account violations | 12% |
| Advertising violations | 9% |
E&O lapses themselves drove 15% of inactivations — not a discipline category, but a license-status problem that tracks straight to compliance failure. Together, agency-disclosure and misrepresentation accounted for 50% of all disciplinary action — both categories that a properly configured E&O policy form has to defend.
Idaho disclosure statutes that drive E&O claims
Five statutes account for the bulk of Idaho agent claims:
Property Condition Disclosure — Idaho Code § 54-2083. Mandates seller disclosure of known defects (structural, environmental, water, septic, well). Agent liability for known omissions or failure to deliver the form. Buyer void rights track this section directly.
Agency Disclosure — Idaho Code § 54-2087. Written agency form required pre-contract. Dual agency requires consent. Largest single discipline category in IREC data (28%).
Water Rights — Idaho Code §§ 54-2083(1)(h) + 42-1410. Critical in agricultural/resort areas. Idaho water rights are first-in-time, first-in-right under the prior appropriation doctrine — a misstatement of priority can void a transaction. *Tricor v. Yost* (2010) is the standard holding.
Mineral Rights — Idaho Code §§ 55-2101 et seq. + § 54-2087. Severed mineral interests must be disclosed; agent liability for failure to reveal ownership splits.
Lead-Based Paint — Idaho Code § 54-2016(10) + 42 U.S.C. § 4852d. Pre-1978 properties; federal AND state penalties stack.
Idaho case law E&O has to defend
Three decisions shape Idaho agent-liability standards:
Beverly v. DeMasters, 152 Idaho 902, 276 P.3d 21 (2012) — Broker liable $225,000 for negligent misrepresentation; failed to disclose known structural defects despite the § 54-2083 disclosure duty. The case sets the standard of care for agents on Property Condition Disclosure form accuracy.
Tricor, Inc. v. Yost, 149 Idaho 257, 233 P.3d 1098 (2010) — Agent breached fiduciary duty under § 54-2096 by not disclosing water-rights discrepancies (§ 42-1410). The Idaho Supreme Court reversed summary judgment for the agent — a leading water-rights agent-liability decision in a state where water is property.
Watts v. Krebs, 131 Idaho 616, 962 P.2d 379 (1998) — Strict liability for nondisclosure of latent defects absent the disclosure form. Drives the rule that agents who skip the form expose themselves directly.
Not every Idaho claim becomes appellate law. Most resolve at deposition or IREC consent agreement. But these three set the standard your E&O carrier's defense team will be litigating against.
How Idaho's market drives premium
Idaho has roughly 16,500 active licensees (IREC 2023 data, ~1,200 brokerages). Three metros set the market:
- Boise / Treasure Valley — $525,000 median, the bulk of Idaho transaction volume. Fast growth + cash buyers + investor activity = elevated misrepresentation claim frequency.
- Coeur d'Alene — $595,000 median, strong second-home and lake-property market. Vacation-rental compliance and seasonal-disclosure claims cluster here.
- Idaho Falls — $435,000 median, more agricultural and rural-residential exposure.
Vacation-rental volume in Sun Valley, McCall, and Bonner County elevates short-term-rental compliance and HOA-disclosure claims. Agricultural and ranch-land transactions across the state drive water-rights and boundary-dispute claims (40% of Idaho listings have rural exposure). E&O claims in resort counties run 15% above the state baseline.
PBI Group's recommended Idaho configuration: $1M per claim / $2M aggregate for 10–25-agent firms with material vacation-rental exposure; defense outside the limits (matching the statutory floor pattern); water-rights and STR-compliance endorsements.