Apartment & Multi-Family Insurance
Proactive protection for multi-family rental buildings.
Acera Insurance has the real estate expertise to guide and support private owners, property managers, family offices, developers, REITs, and institutional investors throughout Canada. As a Canadian-owned and employee-controlled brokerage, we’re invested in reducing your risks and preventing losses.

Featured Resource
Multi-family Living is Community Living: 360° Risk Management
Discover some easy risk control measures that your property manager and residents can implement to prevent or minimize losses.
Canada-wide partnerships with local connections.
Whether you manage a single apartment building or a large multi-family portfolio, we’re here to provide specialized, proactive insurance solutions designed to protect your assets. We have decades of proven real estate experience working with multi-unit builders and developers, REITs, property owners, managers and boards.
We know every residential property is unique – from garden-style buildings, to mid-rise and high-rise apartments, and mixed-use residential developments. That’s why we’ll work closely with you to develop a policy that is tailored to meet your needs. We also offer holistic property risk audits and infrastructure assessments.
Coverage across Canada.
With 60+ local branches and 1,000+ professionals, we’re here for you when you need us.
Comprehensive coverage for residential properties.
Our coverage for operators of multi-family and apartment buildings typically includes commercial general liability, property insurance, loss of rental income, cyber liability, and more. However, our approach is not one-size-fits-all. We provide purpose-built solutions based on your specific building and portfolio.
For more residential real estate coverage details, speak with a specialist today

Why choose Acera Insurance for apartment and multi-unit insurance?
With Acera Insurance, our dedicated team of real estate specialists ensures you’ll always work directly with experts, not a call centre. Each year, we’ll go over your contracts and coverage together to help avoid unexpected issues if a claim or dispute arises. From evaluating risks and offering tailored guidance to providing hands-on support during claims, we’ll be by your side every step of the way.

Risk Mitigation
We believe that owner awareness and education are critical in multi-family living. To help ensure your management strategy is effective, we’ll provide proactive loss prevention solutions that help you stay one step ahead. We can also help deliver a greener claims path through our eco-aligned restoration partnerships.

Claims Concierge Service
We provide dedicated in-house claims support to minimize instances of downtime. This includes a vetted adjuster network and 24/7 after hours access for emergency claims.
Human-driven Technology
Experience big broker technology with boutique broker service. With Acera Insurance, you get the convenience of digital tools, with reliable access to our residential real estate advisors.
Explore our apartment and multi-unit insurance resources.
Answering your most common questions.
What does apartment and multi-unit insurance include?
Apartment and multi-unit insurance is built to protect the income, assets, and liability of a residential rental operation, not just the building itself. A risk-first approach starts by understanding how your property is used, where failures typically occur, and what would materially disrupt your operations if something went wrong.
At a minimum, coverage addresses physical damage to buildings and common areas, as well as liability arising from injuries, property damage, or allegations connected to tenants, visitors, contractors, or day-to-day operations. These coverages form the foundation of most apartment insurance programs.
Beyond the basics, a risk-focused program considers the events that create the greatest financial and operational impact. This often includes protection for loss of rental income following a major loss, breakdown of critical building systems such as boilers, electrical, or HVAC, cyber exposure tied to tenant data and property management systems, and governance liability for ownership groups, boards, or REIT structures.
Depending on the property and portfolio, insurance may also respond to risks related to vacancy, renovations and capital projects, mixed-use occupancies, contractual obligations with property managers and service providers, or environmental exposures.
Because apartment risks are driven by how a building is operated, occupied, and maintained, effective insurance is not standardized or off-the-shelf. It is structured around the specific risks of your property and supported by proactive risk mitigation to reduce both the frequency and severity of claims over time.
Why does my business need to be added as an additional insured on contractors’ insurance policies?
When contractors work on your property, there’s always a risk their activities could lead to an injury or property damage. Even if the contractor is deemed to be at fault, owners of the property are often named in lawsuits for incidents that happened on their premises. When you’re listed as an additional insured, the contractor’s insurance extends to cover you. Their insurer (not yours) would cover legal defence and settlement costs, transferring risk away from your own policy. This also helps to protect your claims history and keeps your premiums stable over time.
Why does apartment and multi-family insurance require a specialist broker?
Apartment and multi-unit properties carry a unique combination of property, liability, contractual, and operational risks. These risks are driven not only by the physical building, but by how the property is occupied, maintained, financed, and managed over time.
A specialist broker understands how losses typically occur in residential rental buildings, how leases and management agreements affect liability, and how insured values, deductibles, and limits interact in real claim scenarios. They also understand how insurer appetite, claims trends, and regulatory expectations differ across residential property types.
Without this specialization, coverage can appear adequate on paper but fall short when a claim occurs. A specialist approach ensures insurance decisions are aligned with the realities of operating multi-family properties, not just policy templates.
How does underinsurance impact claims settlements?
Underinsurance can significantly reduce claim recoveries, even when a loss is otherwise covered. When insured values do not reflect true replacement costs, insurers may apply penalties that reduce the amount paid on a claim, leaving owners responsible for a portion of the loss.
In multi-family buildings, underinsurance can also delay repairs, disrupt rental income, and create disputes with lenders or investors. These impacts often extend beyond the immediate property damage and affect long-term asset value and cash flow.
Regular valuation reviews and disciplined coverage management help ensure that insurance responds as intended when it is needed most.
What do lenders typically require from apartment insurance programs?
Lenders generally require insurance programs that protect both the physical asset and the income supporting the loan. This often includes minimum property and liability limits, loss of rental income coverage, lender loss payable clauses, and confirmation that policies meet specific wording and endorsement requirements.
Requirements can vary by lender and financing structure, and may evolve over time. Failure to meet these requirements can delay financing, breach loan covenants, or create issues following a claim.
Working with a specialist broker helps ensure insurance programs remain aligned with lender expectations while also supporting the owner’s broader risk and asset protection strategy.
How do I know if my liability coverage limits are enough?
Adequate liability limits are determined by how your property is used, not just what it’s worth. Factors such as building size, number of units, tenant density, amenities, contractors on site, and public access all affect exposure. A high-occupancy apartment building carries very different risk than a small walk-up, even if their values are similar.
Liability claims are becoming more costly across Canada, with higher damage awards and rising legal defence expenses. In many cases, lenders, investors, or partners also require specific minimum limits as part of financing or contractual agreements.
Acera’s real estate specialists help assess whether your liability limits align with your operations, benchmark coverage against similar properties, and evaluate potential worst-case scenarios, ensuring your insurance keeps pace as risks evolve.
How often should apartment and multi-unit insurance be reviewed?
Apartment and multi-unit insurance should be reviewed annually as part of ongoing risk management, and whenever there are material changes to the property or operations. This includes renovations, changes in occupancy, updated values, new contracts, or changes in ownership or management structure.
An insurance review does not mean remarketing the program each year. Instead, it focuses on confirming that coverage, limits, and insured values continue to align with how the property is being operated and where risks may have changed. Regular reviews help ensure contractual obligations are met and emerging exposures, such as cyber risk or evolving liability trends, are addressed before a loss occurs.
What are the most common coverage gaps for apartment owners?
Coverage gaps often arise not from lack of insurance, but from misalignment between coverage and how a property actually operates. Common gaps include undervalued buildings, insufficient loss of rental income periods, exclusions tied to renovations or vacancy, and contractual obligations that are not reflected in the policy.
Other frequent gaps include inadequate liability limits, missing additional insured status under contractor agreements, and limited coverage for building systems such as boilers, electrical infrastructure, or life safety equipment.
These gaps often go unnoticed until a loss occurs. A risk-first review focuses on identifying where assumptions no longer match reality, helping owners address issues before they become costly problems.
How do renovations and capital projects affect insurance?
Renovations and capital projects change a property’s risk profile, often in ways that are not immediately obvious. Construction activity can introduce new liability exposure, increase fire and water damage risk, and trigger policy exclusions if not properly disclosed.
Projects may also affect insured values, business interruption exposure, and contractual liability with contractors and consultants. In some cases, coverage may need to be temporarily adjusted or supplemented to reflect the nature and duration of the work.
A risk-first approach ensures insurance is aligned before work begins, not after an issue arises, helping avoid coverage gaps during periods of elevated exposure.
Speak to a specialist.
Get in touch with a specialized advisor on our real estate insurance team and we’ll get to work building the ideal coverage for you.


