What Insurance Does My Lease Require and How Do I Not Overpay?
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 1200 340" role="img" aria-label="What Insurance Does My Lease Require and How Do I Not Overpay? — PULSE Buildouts"><rect width="1200" height="340" fill="#EBE9DE"/><rect width="14" height="340" fill="#C0531F"/><text x="58" y="116" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="32" font-weight="800" letter-spacing="3" fill="#C0531F">PULSE BUILDOUTS · COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE</text><text x="56" y="198" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="60" font-weight="800" fill="#2b2b2b">Save money.
Don’t get screwed.</text><text x="58" y="258" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="30" font-weight="600" fill="#6b5b4d">Leases, TI, NNN & buildouts — negotiated in your favor</text><g transform="translate(1010,86)" fill="none" stroke="#C0531F" stroke-width="9" stroke-linejoin="round"><rect x="20" y="40" width="150" height="130"/><line x1="20" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><line x1="170" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><rect x="50" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="104" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="74" y="128" width="42" height="42"/></g></svg>
What Insurance Does My Lease Require and How Do I Not Overpay?
Direct Answer
The money move is to match your insurance exactly to what the lease actually requires — not what your broker upsells — and to negotiate the limits and waiver-of-subrogation language at signing so you're not over-buying coverage or double-paying for the landlord's risk. Most commercial leases require four things: Commercial General Liability (CGL) at $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate, property/business-personal-property coverage on your improvements and contents, business interruption insurance, and workers' compensation. Many landlord forms then pile on inflated limits — demanding $5M umbrella coverage on a small 3,000 SF office where $1M–$2M is plenty — which can add thousands of dollars a year in premium you don't need.
The two-part play: (1) cap and right-size the limits in the lease so you're not buying $5M when $2M satisfies the real risk, and (2) get a mutual waiver of subrogation so you and the landlord each insure your own property and neither side's insurer can chase the other — which prevents the lease from quietly making you the landlord's insurer.
The trap is signing a landlord form with open-ended "such other insurance as Landlord may require," auto-escalating limits, and a one-way indemnity that makes you responsible for the landlord's negligence.
The Four Coverages a Lease Typically Requires
1. Commercial General Liability (CGL). Covers third-party bodily injury and property damage in your space. Standard requirement: $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate. The lease will require you to name the landlord (and often the property manager and lender) as additional insureds. That's normal — but read whether they want primary and non-contributory status, which shifts more cost to your policy.
2. Property / Business Personal Property (BPP). Covers your tenant improvements, furniture, equipment, and inventory — typically at replacement cost. Insure your *actual* improvement and contents value; over-insuring wastes premium, under-insuring leaves you exposed and can breach the lease.
3. Business Interruption. Replaces lost income if a covered event (fire, water damage) shuts you down. Often overlooked, and the biggest real-dollar protection for a tenant whose revenue depends on the space.
4. Workers' Compensation. Statutory if you have employees. Limits are set by state law, not the landlord.
Where Landlords Make You Overpay
The lease, not the insurance market, is usually what inflates your premium:
- Excessive limits: a form demanding $5M umbrella on a low-risk small office. Push to right-size to $1M–$2M plus an umbrella only if the risk profile justifies it.
- Auto-escalating limits: "limits shall increase as Landlord reasonably requires." This is an open checkbook. Cap it: "limits shall not increase more than once every 3 years and only to then-customary market levels."
- Duplicate coverage: the landlord carries property insurance on the building shell and passes the premium through your CAM, *then* requires you to insure overlapping items. Make sure you're insuring your improvements and contents, not the building structure the landlord already covers.
- One-way indemnity: "Tenant shall indemnify Landlord for all claims." A one-way indemnity can force you to cover the landlord's own negligence. Negotiate mutual indemnity limited to each party's own negligence.
The Waiver of Subrogation — The Clause That Saves Real Money
This is the most important and most overlooked insurance clause. Subrogation is when your insurer, after paying a claim, sues the party that caused the loss to recover. Without a mutual waiver, here's the trap: a fire starts in the landlord's HVAC, the landlord's insurer pays, then the landlord's insurer sues you — and *your* insurer pays again.
You end up effectively insuring both sides.
A mutual waiver of subrogation says each party's insurer waives the right to chase the other. Target: "Landlord and Tenant each waive all rights of recovery against the other for any loss covered by property insurance, and each shall cause its insurer to consent to such waiver." This:
- Prevents double exposure to the landlord's losses.
- Lets you carry lower, cheaper limits because you're not absorbing the landlord's subrogation risk.
- Is standard and routinely granted — if a landlord refuses it, that's a red flag worth pushing on.
Negotiate the Insurance Section Before You Sign
The insurance clause is one of the most editable parts of a lease because right-sizing it costs the landlord nothing real:
- Strike "such other insurance as Landlord may require." Replace with a defined, capped list.
- Cap limit increases to once every few years at customary market levels — no unilateral escalation.
- Make indemnity mutual and limited to each party's own negligence.
- Lock the waiver of subrogation as mutual and binding on both insurers.
- Confirm additional-insured scope is reasonable — naming the landlord and lender is fine; agreeing to make your policy *primary* for the landlord's own acts is not.
- Self-insurance threshold: if you're a large, creditworthy tenant, negotiate the right to self-insure certain coverages and skip premium entirely.
Don't Over-Buy at the Broker Stage
Once the lease limits are set, shop the actual policy:
- Get 2–3 competing quotes. Premiums for identical coverage vary widely between carriers.
- Bundle into a BOP (Business Owners Policy) where eligible — it packages CGL, property, and business interruption at a lower combined cost than standalone policies for small and mid-size tenants.
- Match BPP to real replacement value — an annual inventory prevents both over- and under-insuring.
- Right-size the deductible. A higher deductible lowers premium; choose one your cash position can absorb.
- Review annually. Coverage needs change as you grow or shrink; don't let limits drift above what the lease and your risk require.
FAQ
What CGL limits do most leases require? $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate is the standard baseline. Landlords sometimes demand a $5M umbrella on top — push back unless your business is genuinely high-risk, because the extra limit can add meaningful premium for little real benefit.
What is a waiver of subrogation and why does it matter? It's a mutual agreement that each party's insurer won't sue the other for covered losses. Without it, the landlord's insurer can pay a claim and then come after you, exposing you to double liability and forcing higher premiums. Always negotiate it as mutual.
Do I have to insure the building? No — the landlord insures the building structure (and usually passes that premium through CAM). You insure your tenant improvements, contents, and business income. Don't pay twice for the shell.
Can a large tenant skip some coverage? Yes. Creditworthy tenants can often negotiate a self-insurance right for certain coverages above a threshold, avoiding premium altogether. Smaller tenants should instead right-size limits and bundle into a BOP to cut cost.
Sources
- IRMI (International Risk Management Institute), "Commercial Lease Insurance Requirements" — CGL, waiver of subrogation, and indemnity standards.
- JLL, "Tenant Lease Negotiation Guide" — insurance limits and additional-insured provisions.
- CBRE, "Occupier Risk and Insurance" — right-sizing coverage and limit escalation caps.
- Cushman & Wakefield, "Lease Risk Allocation" — indemnity and subrogation negotiation.
- NAIOP, "Commercial Lease Provisions" — insurance, indemnity, and waiver-of-subrogation language.
- BOMA International, "Lease Negotiation Issues for Tenants" — duplicate-coverage and CAM-insurance overlap.
- IREM, "Commercial Lease Management" — tenant insurance compliance and business-interruption coverage.
