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What IAG’s Modular Shelter Move Means for SMEs

Extreme weather is turning continuity planning into an insurance priority

What IAG’s Modular Shelter Move Means for SMEs?w=400

The information on this website is general in nature and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation, or needs. Consider seeking personal advice from a licensed adviser before acting on any information.

IAG’s latest investment through Firemark Ventures is a useful signal for Australian business owners: disaster recovery is no longer just about paying claims after the event.
It is increasingly about helping people and enterprises stay operational, connected and on-site while rebuilding happens around them.

The insurer has taken a stake in Spacecube, a Melbourne-based maker of modular structures designed for rapid deployment after fires, floods and other major disruptions. The model was tested in regional Victoria after the January 2026 bushfires, where temporary units helped affected families remain on their properties during the rebuilding process. For rural operators, that distinction matters. A farm, workshop, accommodation business or regional service provider often cannot simply relocate without creating further financial and operational strain.

The practical appeal is clear. Spacecube structures can be delivered flat-packed, installed quickly and used on properties where normal services or access may be compromised. They can operate with solar and battery systems and connect with existing water and septic infrastructure. For insurers, that may reduce pressure on temporary accommodation claims. For business owners, it may help preserve continuity, customer relationships, livestock management, equipment supervision and community connection.

The broader issue for SMEs is the widening gap between risk awareness and practical preparation. IAG’s Resilient Futures Report, released in June 2026, found that 48% of surveyed small and medium-sized enterprises had been affected by extreme weather in the previous 12 months. The same research pointed to ongoing weaknesses in continuity planning and insurance reviews. That combination can quickly lead to underinsurance, especially where rebuilding costs, replacement equipment values and lost revenue assumptions have not been updated.

For business owners, the lesson is not to wait for a renewal notice before asking whether cover still reflects current conditions. Property sums insured, stock levels, portable equipment, business interruption periods, supplier dependencies and disaster recovery arrangements should all be checked regularly. Businesses in bushfire, flood, cyclone or storm-prone areas may also need to consider whether their policy assumptions match how long repairs, approvals, materials and labour could realistically take after a widespread event.

This is also where advice can be valuable. SMEs with complex premises, regional exposures or mixed personal and commercial assets may benefit from speaking with insurance specialists before an incident, not only after a claim has begun. It may also be timely to compare business insurance options and test whether existing cover still suits the way the business actually operates.

IAG’s Spacecube move is not a replacement for strong insurance settings. Rather, it highlights a shift in the market: resilience, recovery speed and continuity are becoming central to how business insurance value is judged.

Published:Wednesday, 1st Jul 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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Premium:
The amount paid for an insurance policy, usually on a regular basis, to maintain coverage.