← All articles
Renters InsuranceDecember 7, 2025

Renters Insurance Isn't Enough Once Your Stock Vests

Plenty of tech professionals are still renting a nice apartment in Bellevue or Seattle while their net worth has quietly climbed into seven figures through vested stock. The lifestyle says "renter." The balance sheet says "high-net-worth." A basic renters policy is built for the first one — and leaves the second one exposed.

What renters insurance does and doesn't do

A standard renters (HO-4) policy covers your belongings and gives you some personal liability — usually $100,000 to $300,000. That's fine when your net worth is modest. Once you have vested equity a lawsuit could reach, that liability limit becomes the weak point, and your contents limit may not reflect what you actually own.

What to add once you have real assets

  1. A personal umbrella. This is the big one. An umbrella adds $1M+ of liability protection above your renters and auto policies, sized to your net worth — for $150–$300 a year. Renting doesn't exempt you from liability exposure. The coverage gap calculator shows the gap.
  2. Adequate auto liability, which the umbrella sits on top of.
  3. Scheduled valuables — your watch, ring, or camera gear likely exceeds the renters policy's sub-limits.
  4. Enough contents coverage to actually replace what you own.

The point

Wealth doesn't wait until you buy a house to need protecting. If your equity has vested, your liability coverage should reflect it — even while you rent.

Frequently asked questions

Can renters have umbrella insurance? Yes. A personal umbrella sits on top of your renters and auto policies and protects your net worth from a liability claim — important once you have vested stock or savings to protect.

Why isn't my renters policy enough if I have stock? Renters policies cap personal liability (often $100k–$300k) and contents at modest limits. If a lawsuit could reach your vested equity, those limits leave the rest exposed.

How much umbrella should a renter with vested equity carry? At least your net worth, including vested stock — typically starting at $1M and rising with your assets.

More in this series: Homeowners Insurance Questions for H-1B Visa Holders · Relocating to Seattle for a Tech Job? Sort This Insurance First

Related: Coverage Gap Calculator → · The Equity-Wealthy Household’s Insurance Guide →


Life changes ripple across every policy you hold; You're "High Net Worth" on Paper — and Probably Underinsured and Is a $1 Million Umbrella Policy Enough? are useful companions to this guide.

Trella Insurance is an independent brokerage in Bellevue, WA. See your coverage gap with the 30-second calculator or request a free review.

Your coverage picture
starts with one conversation.

No obligation. No sales pressure. Just a clear look at where you stand.

We respond within 24 hours · Licensed in Washington & Idaho