A pipe bursts in a shared hallway and your business unit floods. Many owners assume the building’s policy covers everything. It doesn’t. That gap costs thousands out of pocket every year.
Commercial condos have two insurance layers the association master policy and the unit owner policy. Most buyers never read their bylaws. They don’t know where one ends and the other begins. That’s where losses happen.
In this guide, you’ll learn what commercial condo insurance covers, how master policies work, real costs and how to avoid the coverage mistakes that hurt business owners most.
Commercial condos carry risks that standard property policies don’t cover. The building is shared. Ownership is split. Liability is layered. A basic commercial policy misses all of that.
This problem happens when a business owner assumes general liability is enough. It’s not. They still need coverage for improvements and betterments, business contents and their share of special assessments after a major building loss.
Mixed-use buildings make this worse. Offices, retail shops and residential units share one roof. A customer slips in a shared lobby. A tenant’s kitchen fire spreads. These situations require commercial condo unit owners insurance not a basic policy.
Commercial condo insurance has two main parts: the master policy and the unit owner policy.
The master policy covers the building structure, common areas and shared liability. The association buys it. Unit owners fund it through HOA fees. It protects the roof, lobbies, elevators and exterior walls.
Two common types exist. Bare walls covers only the building shell. All-in extends to original fixtures inside units. Always read your bylaws they spell out exactly what’s covered.
Unit owners need their own policy to cover what the master policy leaves out. A Business Owner’s Policy (BOP) is the standard solution. It covers:
The master policy has a deductible of often $10,000 or more. If damage starts inside your unit, you may owe that full amount. Your BOP covers that gap.
The master policy protects the building. Your BOP protects your business inside it.
| Coverage | Master Policy | Unit Owner BOP |
| Building structure | Yes | No |
| Your business contents | No | Yes |
| Your improvements | Often no | Yes |
| Your liability | Limited | Yes |
| Master deductible | You owe it | Can be covered |
| Business interruption | No | Yes |
You can solve this by reviewing your bylaws before buying any policy. Ask your broker to coordinate both layers so no gaps exist.
Costs depend on building size, location and business type.
| Coverage Type | Annual Cost Range |
| Master policy small building | $3,000 – $12,000 |
| Master policy large building | $35,000 – $60,000+ |
| Unit owner BOP small office | $500 – $1,200 |
| Unit owner BOP retail/service | $1,000 – $3,500+ |
Older buildings, coastal locations and high foot traffic all raise premiums. Prior claims history matters too. Associations with good maintenance records pay less.
These situations happen to commercial condo owners every year.
Water Damage: A shared-wall pipe bursts. Three units flood below. The master policy covers the structure. Unit owners without a BOP pay for their own contents and lost income.
Slip-and-Fall: A customer slips near a ground-floor retail entrance. The lawsuit names both the unit owner and the association. Both need separate liability coverage.
Fire Spread: A kitchen fire jumps to neighboring office units. Unit owners without business interruption coverage lose weeks of income with zero reimbursement.
Start by reading your association bylaws they define what the master policy covers.
Customers struggle most by skipping step one. They buy a policy and later discover the master deductible is $25,000 and they owe every dollar.
Q: Is commercial condo insurance required by law? No federal law requires it, but most lenders and bylaws require unit owners to carry their own coverage before occupying a unit.
Q: What is bare walls coverage? Bare walls means the master policy covers only the building shell not your floors, fixtures, or upgrades inside the unit.
Q: What does special assessment coverage do? It pays your share of surprise charges the association bills after a major loss not fully covered by the master policy.
Q: Does the master policy cover my business equipment? No. Business contents, equipment and improvements require your own unit owner BOP.
Q: Can a small business owner get a BOP for a condo unit? Yes. A BOP is the most common and affordable option for small business unit owners in commercial condos.
Commercial condo insurance is two layers not one. The master policy covers the building. Your unit owner BOP covers your business inside it. Missing either layer puts your income and assets at serious risk.
Smart owners close the gaps by reviewing bylaws, matching coverage to real risks and working with specialists who understand how commercial condo structures work.
At OLPolicy, we help business owners and associations get the right coverage without the confusion. Call us today at +1 (866) 757-5350 we’ll build a plan that protects your unit, your business and your bottom line.