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Cyclone Pool Delivers Relief, But Farmers Still Need to Check Cover

What the ACCC’s final report means for northern rural properties

Cyclone Pool Delivers Relief, But Farmers Still Need to Check Cover?w=400

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The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s final monitoring report on the cyclone reinsurance pool has delivered a mixed message for rural and regional northern Australia.
The pool appears to have helped ease some premium pressure for medium to high cyclone-risk areas, including reductions across home, strata and small business building and contents cover.
For farm families and agribusinesses in cyclone-exposed regions, that is welcome news after years of rising costs and limited choice.

However, the report also shows why cheaper premiums are only one part of the story. The ACCC found that the pool has not materially encouraged more insurers to enter or expand in northern markets. In practical terms, many rural businesses may still face narrow product choice, stricter underwriting, or difficulty securing cover that properly reflects the scale of their sheds, machinery, fencing, irrigation systems, livestock infrastructure and household assets.

For farmers, the small business findings are particularly relevant. The report identified sizeable premium falls in some cyclone-prone centres, but outcomes vary by location, property type and risk profile. A lower premium does not automatically mean a stronger policy. The key question remains whether the cover responds to the full range of farm exposures, including cyclone damage, flood, storm surge, debris impact, loss of stored goods, business interruption and the cost of rebuilding in remote areas where labour and materials can be scarce after a major event.

The mitigation issue also deserves close attention. The ACCC noted that more insurers are recognising cyclone risk-reduction work, yet the benefit passed through to policyholders can be modest compared with the cost of upgrades. That matters for farmers investing in stronger roofing, improved drainage, secure machinery storage or reinforced buildings. If you are spending money to reduce risk, it is sensible to document the work carefully, keep invoices and photos, and ask your insurer how those improvements are reflected in pricing or terms.

This report is also an extension of a broader insurance affordability theme affecting Australian agriculture. Climate risk, claims inflation and regional repair costs continue to shape insurer appetite. The pool may soften one pressure point, but it does not remove the need for regular policy reviews.

Before the next cyclone season, it may be useful for farmers in northern Australia to:

  • review sums insured for homes, sheds, plant, machinery and contents;
  • check cyclone, flood and storm definitions carefully;
  • confirm whether business interruption or loss of income cover is adequate;
  • ask how mitigation work is recognised by the insurer;
  • compare farm insurance options rather than renewing automatically;
  • seek guidance from farm insurance brokers if the property has complex risks.

The takeaway is clear: premium relief is positive, but resilience depends on having cover that matches the real risks of the farm, not just the cheapest available renewal notice.

Published:Tuesday, 30th Jun 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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Knowledgebase
Insurance Policy:
Broadly, the entire written contract of insurance. More narrowly, the basic written or printed document, as distinguished from the forms and endorsements added thereto.