What Does Residential Community Insurance Cover in Nevada Communities?
Residential community insurance in Nevada is a master policy purchased by a homeowners association (HOA) or condominium association to cover shared structures, common areas, and collective liabilities that individual homeowner policies do not address. It protects the community as a whole, covering everything from clubhouses and pools to sidewalks and parking lots, along with liability arising from incidents in common areas and governance-related claims against board members.
Understanding exactly what your community's master policy covers, and where the gaps are, is one of the most important financial protection decisions a Nevada HOA board or homeowner can make.
Why Nevada Communities Face Unique Insurance Challenges
Nevada's insurance environment for HOAs and condos is unlike most other states. In Nevada, HOAs and condominium associations are coded as commercial properties, not residential, under state law. This classification means they are subject to commercial insurance rules and pricing, with less regulatory protection than standard homeowner policies.
The consequences are significant and growing. According to the Nevada Current, nationwide in 2023, there were $21.6 billion in underwriting losses for personal lines, and insurers have responded by withdrawing from high-risk markets, tightening underwriting criteria, and dramatically raising premiums. Nevada HOAs have been caught directly in this tightening, with some communities facing deductibles of $250,000 or more and rate increases being passed down to residents as special assessments.
According to the Nevada Division of Insurance, Nevada homeowners insurance rates rose 7.5% in 2023 and have increased 21% since 2018, with HOA-governed communities among the most affected due to their commercial classification and exposure to wildfire, flood, and liability risks.

What Residential Community Insurance Typically Covers
Residential community insurance in Nevada typically bundles several coverage types into a single master policy. Here is what each component addresses:
I. Common Area Property Coverage
This covers the physical structures and property owned collectively by the community, including clubhouses, recreation centers, pools, parking structures, walkways, landscaping features, fencing, and exterior lighting. If a covered event such as fire, vandalism, storm, or theft damages these shared assets, the master policy pays for repair or replacement.
II. General Liability Coverage
If someone is injured or their property is damaged in a common area of the community, the HOA's general liability coverage responds to the resulting claim. Slip-and-fall accidents at pools, injuries on playgrounds, and property damage caused by falling trees in common areas are all examples of incidents that trigger this coverage.
III. Directors and Officers (D and O) Insurance
Insurance for HOAs and condos must include D and O coverage to protect board members from personal lawsuits related to their governance decisions. HOA boards make decisions about budgets, rules enforcement, vendor contracts, and assessments. Without D and O coverage, individual board members can be personally named in lawsuits arising from these decisions.
IV. Master Policy Deductible Considerations
Understanding the master policy deductible for your HOA is critical. In Nevada's hardening insurance market, many communities now carry deductibles of $25,000, $50,000, or even higher. When a loss occurs, the HOA must pay the deductible before the master policy responds. Individual homeowners may be assessed for their share of a large deductible through a special assessment provision.
Nevada residents in HOA-governed communities should ensure their individual HO-6 policy includes loss assessment coverage to protect against being personally billed for a share of the community's deductible.
V. Workers Compensation
If the HOA employs maintenance staff, groundskeepers, or other workers on a regular basis, workers compensation coverage is required under Nevada law. This protects both the employees and the association from the financial impact of on-the-job injuries.
VI. Crime and Fidelity Coverage
HOAs collect and manage significant sums of money through monthly dues and reserve funds. Fidelity bonding protects the community against financial losses caused by theft or fraud by employees, board members, or management companies with access to HOA funds.

What Residential Community Insurance Does NOT Cover
Understanding coverage gaps is as important as understanding what is included.
| What Is Typically Covered | What Is Typically NOT Covered |
| Common area structures and property | Individual unit interiors (walls-in) |
| Liability in common areas | Individual homeowner personal liability |
| D and O claims against board members | Flood damage (requires separate policy) |
| Crime and employee dishonesty | Earthquake damage (requires separate policy) |
| Workers compensation for HOA staff | Mold remediation (often excluded) |
The Difference Between Bare Walls and All-In Master Policies
Nevada HOA master policies come in two primary structures:
- Bare walls coverage insures the building structure from the exterior in, including framing, roofing, and exterior walls, but stops at the unfinished interior surfaces. Individual unit owners are responsible for everything inside, including flooring, fixtures, cabinets, and wall finishes.
- All-in coverage extends the master policy to cover original fixtures and finishes inside individual units. This structure is more common in older condominium buildings and reduces the coverage burden on individual unit owners.
Knowing which structure your community carries directly determines how much individual HO-6 insurance each unit owner needs to carry.
Key Coverage Types at a Glance
| Coverage Type | What It Protects | Who Benefits |
| Common Area Property | Shared structures and amenities | The entire community |
| General Liability | Third-party injury/property claims in common areas | The HOA as an entity |
| Directors and Officers | Board members from governance lawsuits | Individual board members |
| Crime and Fidelity | HOA funds from theft or fraud | The community financially |
| Workers Compensation | Employees injured on the job | HOA staff and the association |
How to Make Sure Your Nevada HOA Is Properly Covered
Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 116 requires HOAs to maintain insurance covering common property, liability, and board member protection. Non-compliance carries legal and financial penalties. However, minimum compliance does not mean adequate coverage.
An experienced Nevada HOA insurance broker will review your community's governing documents, physical assets, claims history, and risk profile to recommend appropriate limits and identify gaps before a loss makes them painfully apparent.
Get Expert HOA Insurance Guidance from e360 Insurance Services
Nevada's HOA insurance market is complex, expensive, and moving fast. Working with a broker who specializes in residential community insurance and understands Nevada's specific legal landscape is the most important step any HOA board can take.
e360 Insurance Services provides tailored insurance for HOAs and condos across Nevada, helping associations understand their master policy structure, right-size their coverage limits, address master policy deductible exposure, and navigate the challenges of Nevada's current insurance market with confidence.
Contact e360 Insurance Services today for a no-obligation review of your community's coverage and a competitive quote built specifically for Nevada HOAs.
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