The market covers Virginia Beach and Hampton Roads on the coast, the Blue Ridge and Shenandoah Valley in the mountains, the Charlottesville and Williamsburg history-and-wine corridor, and lakes like Smith Mountain. It serves beach, mountain, and heritage travelers, with very different rules and risks at each.
Hurricanes, mountains, and historic homesOn the coast, Virginia faces hurricane and nor’easter wind with surge and tidal flooding around Virginia Beach and Hampton Roads. In the mountains, the exposure shifts to winter freeze and remote access. Across the older heritage markets, historic construction raises rebuild and code-upgrade costs. Flood, as everywhere, is a separate question a standard policy does not answer.
Virginia claims fail along familiar lines, coastal flood and named-storm deductibles near the water, freeze and access inland. There is also a permit trap: Virginia Beach does not accept the free coverage bundled by booking platforms, so a host relying on it can be both out of compliance and underinsured. Confirm flood coverage, your deductible, and that your own policy meets the local limit.
Virginia hands regulation to its localities. Virginia Beach is the demanding end: an annual zoning permit, a conditional use permit for non-owner-occupied properties in many zones, and $1 million in liability coverage that specifically applies to the rental and lists the property address, the city pointedly does not accept platforms’ free coverage. Alexandria’s 2025 ordinance requires registration, a 24-hour contact, and at least $250,000 in coverage; Richmond limits rentals to owners who live in the home 185 days a year; and the Shenandoah Valley counties stay light. Make sure your own policy, not the platform’s, meets the local limit before you buy.