STR insurance · WV

Short-term rental insurance in West Virginia.

West Virginia is a low-cost, lightly regulated market built around its outdoor economy. Here is how carriers read a West Virginia short-term rental.

The market

The market follows the terrain: the New River Gorge corridor around Fayetteville, elevated since national-park designation in 2020, Snowshoe and Canaan Valley on the ski calendar, Harpers Ferry in the eastern panhandle, and Morgantown on the WVU schedule. Cabin stock dominates, much of it remote.

Steep terrain, remote response

The perils are Appalachian: flash flooding in steep hollows where water rises fast and flood insurance is rare, freeze in winter-vacant cabins, wood-heat fire with long volunteer-department response distances, and slope movement that standard policies exclude as earth movement.

Where claims go wrong

West Virginia claims most often fail on flash flood, no flood policy in a hollow that flooded anyway, on freeze treated as maintenance, and on slope and earth-movement exclusions after heavy rain. Confirm flood coverage against the terrain, not just the FEMA map, plus your freeze terms and your distance from the responding station.

Regulation on the ground

West Virginia has no statewide STR registration; counties and towns decide, and most decide lightly. Fayetteville and the Gorge communities run modest registration and safety rules, Harpers Ferry limits rentals in its historic core, and Morgantown applies general rental registration. Some municipalities require proof of liability coverage with the local permit. State sales tax plus county hotel occupancy taxes apply, largely through the platforms. Confirm the county’s rules and the flood question before you buy.

By state

Other state guides.