What It Costs and Why It’s Worth It
Moving off campus is a milestone — a real lease, a real apartment, and a real pile of belongings that didn’t come from the dorm-supply aisle. What often gets skipped in the move is renters insurance. Skipping it can turn a routine break-in, kitchen fire, or burst pipe into a financial setback that takes years to recover from.
Here’s how off-campus students (and the parents helping them figure it out) should think about renters insurance, what it actually covers, and why Lemonade has become a popular choice for this specific situation.
In partnership with Lemonade, let’s break down what families need to know as they transition out of the dorms and into their first apartments. Get a quote here >>
When a student lives in a dorm, many families buy specialized dorm room renters insurance policies. These cover the dorm, as well as personal belongings.
Once they’re renting an apartment, townhouse, or room in a shared house, the student needs their own renters insurance policy. This catches a lot of families off guard, especially during sophomore or junior year, when a student moves out of the dorm without changing anything else about how the family’s insurance is structured.
The risk isn’t hypothetical. The U.S. Department of Education recorded 6,500 burglaries on college campuses in 2021, and theft and burglary together account for about 44% of campus criminal activity. Off-campus units tend to carry more exposure than dorms, including ground-floor windows, shared entryways, roommate turnover, and less security infrastructure.
Theft isn’t even the most common claim. Among college-student renters, the most reported losses are fire or severe weather (31%), accidental water damage (31%), vandalism (22%), and theft (17%). A clogged sink, an overloaded power strip, or a kitchen towel too close to the stove can wipe out a laptop, a TV, and a year’s worth of textbooks in an afternoon.
Survey data from Insurify shows 36% of college students say they can’t afford to replace their belongings without renters in
A standard policy has three main parts:
Most policies also include medical payments to others and optional add-ons for high-value items like cameras, instruments, or jewelry.
Renters insurance is one of the cheapest pieces of financial protection a young adult can buy. The average for a college student renters insurance policy runs about $21.95 a month, or roughly $263 a year, according to Insurify.
Lemonade starts as low as $5 per month, depending on the state and the student’s situation, and the company says its policies run about 30% less than typical renters insurance. The basic tier includes $10,000 in personal property coverage, with the option to scale up to the $15K–$25K range most off-campus students need.
Put another way: protecting more than $15,000 worth of belongings costs less than a single takeout dinner per month.
A few reasons Lemonade has caught on with student renters:
You can get a quote in about 90 seconds on your phone, and policies can bind the same day — no agent appointment, no paper forms.
Claims happen in the app. Lemonade says roughly 40% of claims are handled instantly and claims are paid out fast thanks to its AI technology, which matters when a student needs to replace a stolen laptop before midterms, not three weeks after.
It’s purpose-built for off-campus renters. Lemonade does not write dorm policies, so the product is specifically designed for students renting their own place.
Pricing is transparent. Premium, coverage limits, and deductible are all shown before the student commits.
The choice usually comes down to two questions:
What would it cost to replace everything in the apartment from scratch? Walk the unit and add up the laptop, phone, bike, TV, clothes, kitchen gear, textbooks, and furniture. The number is almost always over $10,000.
What happens if a guest gets hurt or the student accidentally causes damage to the building? Without liability coverage, the student (or the parents, depending on the lease) could be on the hook for medical bills or repair costs.
For most off-campus students, the math is simple: as little as a $5 monthly premium against a potential five-figure loss. Renters insurance is one of the few financial products where the cost-to-protection ratio sits firmly on the buyer’s side.
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