Scranton PA does not require short-term rental hosts to carry a specific insurance policy or post a liability minimum, and Pennsylvania has no statewide STR insurance mandate. However, hosts using Airbnb or VRBO rely on platform-provided host protection (AirCover up to $1M, VRBO Liability Insurance up to $1M), and a personal homeowner's policy almost always excludes commercial transient rental.
Neither the Scranton City Code nor the Lackawanna County hotel-tax ordinance imposes an insurance requirement on STR operators. Pennsylvania has not legislated a statewide STR insurance floor, so coverage is governed entirely by contract: the host's homeowner's or landlord policy, the rental platform's host-protection program, and any condo or HOA master policy. The major risk for hosts is that a standard Pennsylvania HO-3 homeowner's policy contains a 'business pursuits' exclusion that voids coverage for property damage and liability arising out of a rental for compensation - including a single Airbnb booking. Hosts should either (1) endorse a 'home-sharing' or short-term-rental rider onto the HO-3, (2) move to a commercial Landlord Dwelling policy (DP-3) plus a Hosted Lodging endorsement, or (3) purchase a dedicated STR policy from a specialist carrier (Proper, Slice, CBIZ). Platform protection programs are secondary, not a substitute: Airbnb AirCover provides up to $1,000,000 liability and $3,000,000 host damage but only for losses caused by the verified booking guest and only when filed through Airbnb; VRBO's Liability Insurance is similar. Scranton's rental registration application does not require proof of insurance, but condo associations and mortgage lenders frequently impose insurance requirements via private contract.
Operating without adequate insurance is not a code violation in Scranton, but a guest injury without coverage can result in personal liability up to the host's full net worth. A homeowner's policy that excludes business pursuits will deny the claim, and Pennsylvania's bad-faith statute (42 Pa.C.S. Β§8371) does not help if the exclusion is clearly drafted in the policy.
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See how Scranton's insurance requirements rules stack up against other locations.
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