COI Tracker for Property Managers

COI Tracker for Property Managers is for property managers and operations teams who are tracking insurance certificates manually. The goal is not to make the process complicated. The goal is to give you a practical system you can use today: what to look for, what to write, what to avoid, and where to link the next step in your job search.

Quick answer:
A COI tracker should show vendor name, carrier, limits, certificate holder, expiration date, missing items, and follow-up owner.

Use this first

Paperwork areaTrack thisWhy it matters
COICarrier, limits, holder, expiration dateExpired insurance creates risk
W-9Legal name, EIN, date receivedAccounting needs clean records
License/agreementNumber, expiration, signed dateIt prevents last-minute confusion
Your next actionCreate a COI tracker sheet.Start with one clear move instead of trying everything at once

Priority scorecard

Use this simple visual scorecard as a priority guide. It is not official hiring data; it shows where to focus your effort first.

Expiration tracking91/100

Expired docs create avoidable problems.

Folder organization86/100

Clean folders save time.

Follow-up system82/100

A weekly review prevents emergencies.

Step-by-step plan

  1. Create a COI tracker sheet.
  2. Add every active vendor.
  3. Enter expiration dates.
  4. Flag missing or expired COIs.
  5. Review the tracker weekly.

Quick checklist before you move on

  • ☐ Tracker created
  • ☐ Vendors added
  • ☐ Expirations entered
  • ☐ Expired docs flagged
  • ☐ Weekly review set

Copy/paste working template

Vendor file check:
Vendor name: [company]
COI received: yes / no / expired
W-9 received: yes / no
Agreement/license received: yes / no
Expiration date: [date]
Next follow-up: [date + owner]

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Keeping vendor files in scattered email threads.
  • Waiting until expiration day to ask for updated documents.
  • Not tracking who owns the follow-up.

FAQ

How often should vendor files be reviewed?

A simple weekly review is enough for many small teams, especially if expirations are tracked.

What should be in a basic vendor folder?

COI, W-9, agreement, license if needed, contact info, expiration dates, and follow-up notes.

Need vendor paperwork cleaned up?

If COIs, W-9s, licenses, expiration dates, and vendor folders are scattered everywhere, DamnJobs can help organize the mess.