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In commercial motor, the clearest opportunity appears to sit with fleets that can demonstrate low claim frequency, controlled severity and disciplined risk management. Those businesses may be able to secure flat pricing or modest rate reductions at renewal. By contrast, poor-performing fleets, heavy vehicles and portfolios exposed to frequent vehicle use are still facing increases as insurers price in repair inflation, parts delays, calibration costs for advanced safety systems and repeat-loss behaviour.
This is an important extension to the broader soft-market discussion. A more competitive insurance cycle can create room to negotiate, but it does not remove underwriting scrutiny. For truck owners, the practical question is not simply whether the market is soft; it is whether their own risk profile gives insurers enough confidence to compete for the account. Maintenance records, driver management, telematics, incident reporting, route risk and claims responsiveness all matter when underwriters decide whether a fleet deserves preferred terms.
Operators preparing for renewal should treat the current market as a window to improve presentation, not a reason to relax. A clean, evidence-backed submission can help separate a professional transport business from the wider heavy vehicle risk pool. It may also support discussions about excess structures, downtime protection, cargo exposure and whether policy limits still reflect real replacement and repair costs.
The lesson for Australian truck businesses is that soft conditions are selective. Good risk management may now be rewarded more visibly, while unresolved claims trends can still attract sharp increases. For owner-operators and fleet managers, the next renewal should be approached as a negotiation supported by operational evidence, not just an annual bill.
Published:Wednesday, 15th Jul 2026
Author: Paige Estritori
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