Types of Real Estate Insurance in Louisiana
There are 3 main types of insurance for real estate:
Errors and omissions insurance for real estate agents in Louisiana is mandatory. Louisiana 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 Louisiana
Two policies can carry the same limit and the same price, yet respond in opposite ways to the same lawsuit. These anonymized LA claims show the difference the policy form makes.
The closing that never came
Baton Rouge, LAA listing agent represented the seller of a Baton Rouge home ($125,000, closing set for early February 2025), contingent on financing and title-curative work. Title problems surfaced — a bank lien and a municipal blight lien whose recorded releases were missing — and the agent spent two months chasing documents and tracking down releases across state lines. The closing date passed; the seller didn't sign an extension and no new date was set, so the agent cancelled on the expired agreement. The next day the buyer's side issued a notice of default, and breach-of-contract litigation followed — with the agent drawn in for her records and testimony.
On a standard form
A breach-of-contract fight after a failed closing — with the agent subpoenaed for her file and testimony before she's even named — is the kind of entanglement a thin form is slow to engage, and defense costs that erode the limit leave less to mount a response.
On the PBI Group form
Coordinating a closing and working through title-curative problems is Real Estate Professional Services, so a negligence theory arising from the failed transaction is a covered Wrongful Act — and being subpoenaed for a file and testimony is answered by the form's defense structure, with Claim Expenses outside the limit, so the agent responds with counsel rather than alone. The breach dispute itself runs principally between buyer and seller: E&O answers the agent's professional conduct, not the parties' contract performance — and here the causes of the failed closing lay with the lender and title company.
Not every claim comes from agent error — sometimes a deal collapses on title and lender problems and the agent is swept in. Keep dated records of your requests and follow-ups, and when a default notice or subpoena arrives, report it to your carrier rather than treating it as routine paperwork.
Illustrative summary of a real claim; coverage always depends on the specific facts and policy terms.
Louisiana real estate E&O — frequently asked questions
Does Louisiana require real estate agents to carry E&O insurance?
Yes. La. R.S. 37:1466 mandates E&O for every active Louisiana real estate licensee. The LREC group plan minimum is $100,000 per claim / $300,000 annual aggregate with a $1,000 deductible for damages and zero deductible for defense. Firm policies scale higher ($500K/$1M for 1–5 licensees, $1M/$1M for 6+). Inactive licensees are exempt during inactive status.
How does Louisiana's civil-law redhibition doctrine affect agent E&O exposure?
Louisiana's civil-law tradition (La. Civ. Code arts. 2520–2548) imposes implied warranty of fitness on sellers — and on the agents facilitating the transaction. Where common-law states allow 'as-is' clauses to limit liability, Louisiana's redhibition doctrine creates direct agent exposure for nondisclosure of latent defects (vices). Hurricane and flood non-disclosure cases land here. PBI Group's policy form is written with redhibition defense in mind — generic agent E&O often sub-limits.
Is the LREC group plan's $10K environmental sublimit enough?
Rarely. The group plan's $10,000 environmental sublimit excludes defense costs, meaning a single Hurricane Ida or post-Katrina flood-disclosure claim can exhaust the sublimit during pre-deposition discovery alone. Louisiana brokerages with material coastal volume should carry an environmental endorsement of $250,000 minimum with defense outside the limit. PBI Group's Louisiana program structures this as standard for any New Orleans, Lake Charles, or southwest Louisiana firm.
What is the cost for E&O real estate insurance in Louisiana?
In Louisiana, expect E&O real estate insurance to land in the range of $2,000–$3,000 per $1 million in revenue for a clean, claims-free firm. Final pricing is subject to claims history and other factors — tell us your revenue and we'll price it.
Louisiana requirements & coverage detail
The fine print — what counts as compliant coverage in Louisiana, the statutes behind it, and how our policy form responds. Click any section to expand; sources are cited.
Louisiana mandates E&O — civil law makes it different
La. R.S. 37:1466 requires every active Louisiana real estate licensee to carry E&O. Inactive licensees are exempt during inactive status (subsection G). The statute is more prescriptive than peer states:
- Group plan terms (LREC-procured via competitive bid, A.M. Best A or better carrier): $100,000 per claim / $300,000 annual aggregate, $1,000 deductible for damages, zero deductible for defense costs, $25,000 supplementary coverage for Fair Housing claims (subject to deductible), $10,000 sublimit for environmental claims (defense excluded).
- Firm policies: $500K/$1M (1–5 licensees), $1M/$1M (6+ licensees).
- Premium ceiling: if no compliant carrier offers coverage at ≤$500/year, the mandate voids for the year (subsection H).
- Independent policies are allowed if they meet LREC minima — file verification form and declarations page with annual renewal.
Louisiana's civil-law tradition is the operating context. Where common-law states permit 'as-is' clauses to limit liability, Louisiana's redhibition doctrine (La. Civ. Code arts. 2520–2548) imposes implied warranty of fitness on sellers — and on the agents who facilitate the transaction. Nondisclosure of latent defects creates direct agent exposure even when the seller signed an as-is contract.
Louisiana statutes that drive E&O claims
Louisiana's civil-law structure puts unique pressure on agent disclosure duties:
La. R.S. 37:1455(15) — False representations. Knowingly making any false representation in a transaction. Top discipline category for misrepresentation claims.
La. R.S. 37:1455(16) — Dual agency. Dual agency without written acknowledgment of all parties — a frequent claim driver.
La. R.S. 37:1455(35) — Misleading advertising. Inaccurate or misleading advertising; broader and more aggressively enforced than peer states.
La. R.S. 37:1455(36) — Deceit / fraud. Including improper home inspector referrals; civil-law fraud doctrine is more plaintiff-friendly than common-law equivalents.
La. Civ. Code arts. 2520–2548 — Redhibition. Implied warranty of fitness; nondisclosure of latent defects (vices) makes the seller liable, with the agent often pulled in as a co-defendant. Hurricane, flood, foundation, and mold disputes most often arise here.
Mineral Rights — La. R.S. Title 31 (Mineral Code). Severed mineral interests are pervasive in Louisiana; failure to disclose ownership splits is direct agent exposure.
How Louisiana's market drives premium
Three metros set Louisiana's market shape:
- New Orleans — coastal exposure, historic-property complexity, post-Katrina flood-disclosure litigation density. The plaintiff's bar is among the most active in the South.
- Baton Rouge — state-capital and university market; flood-zone complexity (the Amite River and Comite River basins).
- Lafayette / Acadiana — oil/gas mineral-rights transactions are routine; succession-property transfers add layers of disclosure obligation.
Premium drivers specific to Louisiana: - Hurricane and flood disclosure. Post-Katrina (2005) and post-Ida (2021) litigation reshaped agent disclosure obligations. The group policy's environmental sublimit ($10K) is rarely enough. - Oil/gas mineral rights. Severed minerals require disclosure under the Mineral Code; agents who miss this expose the brokerage. - Succession property. Louisiana's forced-heirship rules (unique among U.S. states) create chain-of-title disputes that drive transaction-coordinator and agent claims. - Civil-law redhibition. Latent-defect exposure is broader and longer-tailed than common-law states.
Recommended Louisiana configuration: $1M per claim / $2M aggregate baseline; mandatory environmental endorsement above the $10K group sublimit; mineral-rights and succession-property riders for Acadiana brokerages.
Coverage configuration for a Louisiana brokerage
PBI Group's recommended Louisiana E&O configuration:
1. Per-claim and aggregate limits above the group floor. Recommended: $1M per claim / $2M aggregate for 10–25-agent firms; $1M / $3M for firms with New Orleans coastal volume, mineral-rights transactions, or material commercial work.
2. Environmental coverage above the $10K sublimit. The LREC group plan's $10K environmental sublimit excludes defense — meaning a Hurricane Ida flood-disclosure dispute can exhaust the sublimit in pre-deposition discovery. Recommended environmental rider: $250K minimum, defense outside the limit.
3. Louisiana-specific endorsements: - Hurricane / flood-disclosure rider for coastal parishes. - Mineral rights endorsement for Acadiana and oil/gas-active areas. - Succession property rider for forced-heirship chain-of-title exposure. - Redhibition defense rider — civil-law latent-defect claims have a longer tail than common-law disclosure disputes.
4. Group plan vs. independent. LREC's group ($149/year for the 2025 contract year) is convenient but the $10K environmental sublimit is the operative gap. PBI Group writes independent equivalents that close that gap.