Cyclone Pool Delivers Some Relief for High-Risk Strata Schemes
Premium reductions are welcome, but committees still need to manage risk, sums insured and renewal strategy carefully
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The ACCC’s fifth and final insurance monitoring report has given strata committees in cyclone-exposed regions a clearer view of what the Cyclone Reinsurance Pool is-and is not-achieving.
Released on 25 June 2026, the report found that the pool has helped reduce or moderate premiums for policyholders in higher cyclone-risk areas, including residential strata schemes.
For strata insurance, the ACCC identified an average reduction of eight per cent per $100,000 sum insured in higher-risk locations during the first year after insurers joined the pool.
That is a meaningful result for apartment owners in northern Australia, where premium affordability has been a long-running pressure point. It also provides an important extension to earlier concerns raised by owners in places such as Darwin and north Queensland, where large renewal increases had prompted doubts about whether the pool was delivering enough practical relief. The latest finding suggests the mechanism is having an effect, but not a complete one.
The key message for owners corporations is that a lower reinsurance cost does not automatically solve every premium challenge. The ACCC also noted that insurance remains expensive for many households, and that broader cost drivers-extreme weather losses, claims inflation, construction costs, repair delays and insurer appetite-continue to influence pricing. In practical terms, committees should not assume that a cyclone-pool benefit will offset poor maintenance, unresolved defects, inadequate documentation or weak risk-management planning.
Competition is another concern. The pool was intended to improve availability as well as affordability, yet the ACCC observed that insurer participation in northern markets remains constrained. For strata schemes with complex exposures, that may still mean limited renewal options, higher excesses or stricter underwriting questions. This is where early engagement with specialist brokers can be particularly valuable, especially when a building has prior claims, ageing infrastructure or known cyclone vulnerabilities.
The report also points to the growing role of mitigation. More insurers are recognising private cyclone-risk reduction measures, but the information provided to consumers is not always clear. Strata committees should treat this as a governance opportunity, not just an insurance issue. Useful steps include:
reviewing roof, window, drainage and façade maintenance before renewal season;
keeping evidence of completed works and resilience upgrades;
checking whether the declared sum insured remains appropriate;
asking insurers how mitigation measures are reflected in pricing;
The pool has delivered a welcome premium signal for high-risk strata properties, but it has not removed the need for disciplined insurance planning. For committees, the best response is to combine market testing with practical risk reduction and transparent communication with lot owners.
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