Dwelling Policies (DP-1, DP-2, DP-3)

Imagine an investor purchases a pristine Victorian duplex with the intention of leasing it out. The investor attempts to purchase a standard Homeowners policy, only to be rejected by the underwriter. The fundamental friction here is one of risk: a Homeowners policy assumes the insured occupies the property, actively monitors it, and stores the bulk of their personal wealth within its walls. When a property is purely an investment, those assumptions collapse.

Victorian-style properties are highly sought after by investors, but insuring them as non-owner-occupied rentals requires a specialized Dwelling policy rather than standard Homeowners insurance.
Victorian-style properties are highly sought after by investors, but insuring them as non-owner-occupied rentals requires a specialized Dwelling policy rather than standard Homeowners insurance.

To solve this, the insurance industry created the Dwelling policy, a modular framework designed to insure residential properties that do not qualify for Homeowners policies. By stripping away automatic assumptions about liability, personal property, and occupancy, the Dwelling policy allows agents to construct targeted coverage for landlords, flippers, and property managers.

This study guide dissects the architecture of the Dwelling forms—Basic (DP-1), Broad (DP-2), and Special (DP-3). For your licensing exam, you must master not only what these policies cover, but mathematically how their coverage limits interact and mathematically diminish one another depending on the form selected.

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