Does Insurance Cover Damage During a Party or Event

Updated June 2026
Homeowners insurance generally covers accidental property damage and guest injuries during home parties and events. Your liability coverage pays medical bills if a guest is injured, and your dwelling or personal property coverage pays for damage to your home or belongings. However, serving alcohol creates social host liability exposure, commercial-scale events may fall outside residential use, and intentional damage by guests raises coverage questions that vary by policy.

What Your Policy Covers During Parties

Your homeowners liability coverage (Coverage E) applies to bodily injury and property damage claims from guests on your property. If a guest slips on a wet floor, falls down stairs, or trips over a rug and is injured, your liability coverage pays their medical bills and your legal defense costs if they sue. The medical payments coverage (Coverage F, typically $1,000 to $5,000) pays smaller medical bills without requiring a liability determination, making it useful for minor guest injuries where you want to cover the medical costs as a goodwill gesture.

Damage to your own property during a party is covered under your dwelling (Coverage A) or personal property (Coverage C) if the damage results from a covered peril. If a guest accidentally knocks over a candle and starts a small fire, the fire damage is covered. If a guest breaks a window, the accidental damage may be covered under some policies but not others (accidental damage by guests is a gray area in standard policies). Damage from normal wear and use during a party, such as stained carpets or scratched floors, is not covered because it does not constitute a sudden, accidental loss.

Alcohol and Social Host Liability

Serving alcohol at a party creates liability exposure that varies significantly by state. In states with social host liability laws, you can be held legally responsible if a guest becomes intoxicated at your party and then causes an accident (typically a drunk driving crash) that injures a third party. Approximately 40 states have some form of social host liability, though the scope and conditions vary.

Your homeowners liability coverage generally applies to social host liability claims, paying for your legal defense and any damages awarded, up to your policy limit. However, if you serve alcohol to a minor who then causes an accident, the insurer may argue that you acted with willful disregard for safety, which could trigger the intentional act exclusion. The line between negligent hosting and intentional misconduct is a fact-specific determination that varies by case.

To reduce alcohol-related liability, never serve alcohol to minors under any circumstances. Stop serving alcohol at least one hour before the event ends. Offer non-alcoholic alternatives and food. Arrange transportation options (designated drivers, ride-sharing) for guests who have been drinking. These steps demonstrate responsible hosting and reduce both the likelihood of an incident and the potential for a liability finding against you.

Large Events and Commercial Use

Your homeowners policy covers normal residential use of your property. When events become large enough that they resemble commercial operations, the insurer may argue that the event exceeds residential use and deny liability claims. Charging admission, hiring entertainment, setting up inflatable structures (bounce houses), or hosting events for profit all push the activity toward commercial classification.

For large events, consider event liability insurance (also called special event insurance or party insurance). These short-term policies cost $75 to $300 per event and provide $1 million or more in liability coverage specifically for the event. They cover guest injuries, property damage to the venue (if you are hosting at someone else's property), and alcohol-related liability. Event insurance is particularly important for weddings, large birthday parties, fundraisers, and any gathering with more than 50 guests.

Does insurance cover damage from bounce houses or inflatables?
Injuries from bounce houses and inflatable structures are a significant liability concern. Some homeowners insurers exclude inflatable structures from liability coverage entirely, while others cover them but classify them as high-risk features (similar to trampolines). If you plan to rent a bounce house for an event, check with your insurer first. The rental company should carry their own liability insurance, and you should be named as an additional insured on their policy. Event insurance for the specific party provides an additional layer of protection.
What if a guest intentionally damages my property?
Intentional damage by a guest is not covered under the intentional loss exclusion in your policy, because the exclusion applies only to intentional acts by insured persons (you and your household). A guest who deliberately damages your property has committed a tort (and possibly a crime), and you can pursue them personally or through their renter's or homeowner's liability coverage. Your own property coverage may or may not cover the damage depending on whether your policy classifies vandalism by a known guest differently than vandalism by a stranger. File a police report if the damage is significant.

Fireworks and Fire Pits

Home fireworks use is regulated by state and local law, and injuries or property damage from fireworks at a home event create complex coverage questions. If fireworks are legal in your area and a guest is injured, your liability coverage generally applies. If fireworks are illegal and you set them off anyway, the insurer may argue that illegal activity voids the coverage. Fire damage from fireworks that burn your home or a neighbor's property is covered under the fire peril (fire coverage applies regardless of cause), but the liability for injuries and the property damage you cause to others may be contested.

Fire pits are a more routine feature that most policies cover without issue. Standard precautions (proper distance from structures, a screen to contain sparks, never leaving the fire unattended) reduce both the risk and any potential argument from the insurer that you were negligent in operating the fire pit.

Key Takeaway

Normal home parties are covered by your homeowners liability and property coverage. Alcohol service creates social host liability that your policy generally covers but that responsible hosting practices can minimize. Large or commercial-scale events should be covered by separate event insurance. Check with your insurer before renting inflatables, and always verify that rental companies carry their own liability coverage.