- The gap most owners never see coming
- Probate, renovation, and turnover welcome
Texas Vacant Property Insurance
Your homeowners policy quietly starts pulling coverage the day it becomes vacant.
Vacant property insurance is a specialty policy for homes and buildings sitting unoccupied. Standard homeowners and landlord policies have “vacancy provisions” that limit or exclude major coverages (vandalism, glass breakage, water damage, sometimes theft) once the property has been vacant for 30 to 60 days. Vacant coverage fills that gap for the period the property is empty.
- Coverage for homes vacant beyond your standard policy's limit
- Probate, renovation, tenant turnover, and second homes
- Short-term (3, 6, 12 months) and renewable
- Vandalism and water damage add-ons available
🏚️ Get your vacant property quote
Free, no obligation. Short-term terms available.
Trusted by Texas property owners since 1983
Since 1983
3, 6, and 12 months
Specialty vacant carriers
Renewals, claims, conversions
The vacancy provision most owners never read
Here's what actually happens to your homeowners coverage as vacancy stretches on.
Most standard homeowners and landlord policies contain a vacancy clause that changes how coverage works once a property has been unoccupied for a defined period, usually 30 to 60 days. The specifics vary by carrier, but the pattern is consistent: coverage narrows as vacancy continues.
Coverage typically intact
- Standard homeowners or landlord policy responds normally
- All perils covered per the policy form
- No premium adjustment expected
- Insurer generally not notified
The gray zone begins
- Many policies start their vacancy clock here
- Vandalism, glass, water damage coverage may narrow
- Notice to insurer usually required to preserve coverage
- Claims in this window may face additional scrutiny
Major coverages typically fall off
- Vandalism, glass breakage, water damage often excluded
- Theft coverage may be limited or excluded
- Some carriers void the policy entirely without notice
- Time to transition to a vacant property policy
The four situations that unexpectedly qualify
These aren't the vacancies most owners think of. They're the ones that catch people every year.
Most Texas property owners don’t realize their situation counts as “vacant” for insurance purposes. Here are the four we see most often. If any of them describe your property, the standard policy may have already stopped covering you the way you assume.
Estate, probate, or inherited property
A family member has passed, and the home is sitting empty while the estate is settled. The homeowners policy is still in force (often in the deceased’s name), but nobody is living there. Most policies quietly stop covering vandalism, water damage, and other risks once the vacancy clock passes 30-60 days.
What we do: transition to a vacant property policy that covers the probate period, then help the eventual heir or buyer set up the right policy for occupied use.
Under renovation or remodel
You bought a fixer-upper, or you’re doing a significant renovation before moving in. The home is titled to you and technically insured, but nobody is living there and construction is ongoing. Standard homeowners policies often don’t cover this scenario well, and the vacancy provision is one issue, and construction risks are another.
What we do: place a vacant property or builder’s risk policy designed for the renovation period, then move you to a standard homeowners policy at completion.
Extended tenant turnover
A tenant moved out and the next one hasn’t moved in yet. If the vacancy stretches past 30-60 days (major renovation between tenants, difficult rental market, seasonal timing), your landlord policy’s vacancy provision starts to kick in. This is one of the most common surprises for real estate investors.
What we do: add vacancy coverage to your existing landlord policy or place a short-term vacant policy for the gap period, then transition back to landlord coverage once the new tenant moves in.
Second home or snowbird property
You own a vacation home, ranch house, or second property that sits unused for extended periods. Even with occasional visits, coverage may narrow between them. Some second-home policies handle this well by design, but many standard policies treat the property as vacant during long unused stretches.
What we do: review the existing second-home policy and, if needed, restructure with a policy specifically designed for periodic occupancy.
What vacant property insurance covers
The core coverages in a standard vacant policy.
Vacant property policies are typically written on a dwelling-fire form (DP-1 or DP-3) with vacancy-specific endorsements. Structure and covered perils vary by carrier and property risk profile.
Dwelling
The physical structure of the vacant property. Settlement basis (ACV or replacement cost) depends on the policy form and carrier.
Other Structures
Detached garages, sheds, fences, and other structures on the property. Sometimes included, sometimes optional.
Vandalism (optional)
Vandalism coverage on vacant properties is frequently an add-on rather than included by default. Given the risk profile of vacant homes, it’s usually worth adding.
Water damage (optional)
Water damage from undetected leaks (a major vacant property risk) is often excluded or optional. Especially important to add if utilities remain on.
Premises Liability
Liability coverage if someone is injured on the vacant property, whether legitimate visitors or trespassers.
Short-term terms
Vacant policies are typically written for 3, 6, or 12 months at a time, matching realistic vacancy timelines, and are renewable if the vacancy continues.
Why work with Aimbest
Vacant property is where the standard market gets nervous. We know who writes it.
Vacant coverage is a specialty placement. Many mainstream carriers don’t write it at all, and among those that do, appetite varies by property type, vacancy reason, and duration. We work with specialty and surplus lines carriers who write vacant property as their core product, so we can quote realistically without wasting your time on markets that won’t consider your situation.
Carriers who specifically write vacant property, not just standard homeowners.
Vacant situations often need quick coverage decisions. We move accordingly.
We plan the eventual switch back to standard coverage so nothing falls through the cracks.
"Mom's house sat empty for eight months while we settled her estate. We had no idea her homeowners policy had a vacancy clause until Aimbest walked us through it and set up proper vacant coverage."
How it works
From quote request to bound coverage, four steps.
Share the property details and vacancy situation. A Texas advisor reaches out promptly.
Carriers who specifically write vacant property, matched to your situation and expected duration.
Coverage limits, optional endorsements (vandalism, water), and premium in plain language.
Choose your coverage. Same advisor plans the eventual switch back to standard coverage when the property becomes occupied.
Common questions
Vacant property insurance, answered.
How do policies actually define "vacant"?
Definitions vary by carrier and policy form, but the common thread is a property with no occupants living there and, often, no personal property present to support occupancy. Some policies distinguish “vacant” (unoccupied AND empty of contents) from “unoccupied” (empty of people but still furnished), with different vacancy clauses for each. The trigger period is typically 30, 60, or 90 days, depending on the policy. If you’re not sure how your specific policy defines it, we can help you read the vacancy provision.
Can't I just leave my existing homeowners policy in place?
Technically yes, at first. But once the vacancy stretches past your policy’s trigger period (usually 30-60 days), major coverages start narrowing or falling off entirely. Vandalism, water damage, glass breakage, and sometimes theft are the most commonly affected. A claim in that window may be reduced or denied. The right approach is to notify your carrier of the vacancy (some policies require this) and, if the vacancy is expected to be extended, transition to a vacant property policy that covers the situation properly.
What if I visit the property occasionally? Does that count as occupied?
Usually not. Insurance “occupancy” typically means someone is regularly living at the property, not just visiting periodically. A weekly check-in, mowing the lawn, or a monthly overnight generally doesn’t reset the vacancy clock in most policy forms. If the property is genuinely being used as a residence part of the year (a legitimate second home used seasonally), a second-home or seasonal policy is usually a better fit than either standard homeowners or vacant coverage.
Is vacant property insurance more expensive?
Yes, typically noticeably more expensive per dollar of coverage than a standard homeowners policy on the same home. That’s because vacant properties statistically carry higher loss frequency and severity: undetected leaks cause major water damage, vandalism and break-ins happen more often, fires spread further before being detected, and small issues become large ones without an occupant to respond. The premium reflects the actual risk profile. That said, going without proper coverage is usually far more expensive than the vacant policy premium.
How long can I keep vacant coverage in place?
Vacant policies are typically written for 3, 6, or 12 months and are renewable as long as the property remains vacant. Extended vacancies of a year or more are possible with the right carrier, though premium and terms may shift with time. Once the property becomes occupied (new tenant, sale to new owner, owner moves back in), we transition you back to the appropriate standard policy (homeowners or landlord) for the new use.
What about flood on a vacant property?
Flood coverage is separate from vacant property insurance, just as it’s separate from standard homeowners. NFIP and private flood policies can be written on vacant properties, though some carriers have vacancy considerations of their own. Given Texas flood risk, this is worth including in the conversation whenever we’re setting up vacant coverage.
Related coverage
What pairs with vacant property insurance.
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Vacant now? Or expecting to be soon? Let's close the gap.
Free quote, no obligation. Short-term terms available for probate, renovation, tenant turnover, and second homes.