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The complaint follows reports of households and businesses facing steep year-on-year rises, with some premiums increasing several times over in a relatively short period. Six councils in the region have already been exploring a community mutual as an alternative to relying solely on major insurers, and the latest ACCC referral adds another layer of scrutiny to how risk, repair costs and competition are being handled in regional markets.
For farmers, this matters even when the examples being discussed are not always farm-specific. Rural insurance markets are interconnected. When insurers reassess flood, storm, fire, building and labour risks in remote areas, the effects can flow through to rural property, machinery, liability, home, shed and business interruption cover. A premium shock in one part of the insurance stack can quickly affect cash flow and the ability to maintain comprehensive protection across the whole operation.
The Insurance Council of Australia has pointed to factors such as extreme weather, rising asset values, higher building costs and the added expense of regional repairs. Those pressures are real, but farmers are also entitled to expect clear explanations of how premiums are calculated, what has changed in their risk profile and whether mitigation work is being recognised.
This is a useful extension to the earlier discussion about south-west Queensland councils considering a mutual model. A mutual may improve local control, but it still requires strong actuarial work, reinsurance access, governance and enough scale to withstand major claims events. The ACCC angle shifts the conversation towards market conduct and competition, rather than simply asking communities to create their own workaround.
Producers should treat the issue as a prompt to review their farm insurance cover before renewal dates arrive. That means checking sums insured, exclusions, excesses, flood definitions, machinery values, livestock limits and whether buildings are insured for realistic rebuild costs in the current market.
It may also be worth speaking with farm insurance brokers who understand regional risk and can help compare policy structures, not just headline premiums. In a tightening market, the cheapest option is not always the safest, and the most expensive quote is not always the most complete. The key is transparency, early planning and making sure cover reflects the practical realities of running a farm in regional Australia.
Published:Sunday, 21st Jun 2026
Author: Paige Estritori
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