The market is built on ski country, Stowe, Killington, Okemo, and Mount Snow, plus Burlington and the foliage season. It is intensely seasonal and amenity-heavy, with hot tubs, wood stoves, and trail access that all raise the liability profile. Many properties are second homes that sit empty midweek and between seasons.
Snow load, freeze, and floodVermont carries the northern freeze and ice-dam exposure, plus heavy snow load on mountain roofs, and a flood risk that has turned severe: the July 2023 and July 2024 floods caused major damage across the state. Standard homeowners policies exclude flood entirely, so a riverside or valley property without separate flood coverage is exposed in exactly the scenario Vermont keeps producing.
Two gaps recur in Vermont. Freeze losses in midweek-empty second homes get treated as maintenance, and flood damage gets denied outright because it was never a covered peril to begin with. After two consecutive years of catastrophic flooding, confirm whether you carry separate flood coverage, and how your policy treats vacancy and freeze.
Vermont does not ban short-term rentals but taxes them firmly, a 9 percent Meals and Rooms tax plus the 3 percent state STR surcharge added in August 2024, and requires every operator to post a statewide Short-Term Rental Safety, Health and Financial Obligations form that prompts hosts to confirm their insurance. Towns add real rules: Burlington requires owner-occupancy and annual registration, Stowe’s registry ordinance requires registration and emergency access, and Killington requires annual registration, off-street parking, and proof of insurance. Confirm the town rule and the coverage it expects before you buy.