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Draft Insurance Code Puts Claims Standards Back in Focus

Why fitness professionals should follow the consultation before the next renewal cycle

Draft Insurance Code Puts Claims Standards Back in Focus?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.

The Insurance Council of Australia has opened public consultation on a redrafted General Insurance Code of Practice, with feedback invited from 24 June 2026 until 21 July 2026.
For fitness professionals, this is more than an insurance-sector process.
It is a timely reminder that the value of a policy is tested not only by the premium, but by what happens when a claim, complaint or vulnerable customer situation arises.

The proposed code changes aim to lift standards across areas such as claims handling, customer communication, vulnerability support and enforceability. One of the most important features is the move towards making key obligations legally enforceable in consumer contracts, subject to ASIC approval. While not every measure will apply in the same way to every business policy, the direction of travel is clear: insurers are under pressure to make their promises clearer, more accountable and easier for policyholders to rely on.

That matters in fitness because claims can be complex. A personal trainer may face an injury allegation months after a session. A group fitness instructor may need to show that screening, supervision and incident records were handled properly. A studio owner may need fast guidance after property damage, a public liability incident or a complaint involving a client with additional support needs. In each case, the quality of communication from the insurer can shape both the stress level and the financial outcome.

For sole traders and small fitness businesses, the consultation also reinforces the importance of reviewing policy wording before renewal. Look beyond the headline price and check how your cover responds to professional advice, physical instruction, online sessions, subcontractors, outdoor training, equipment use and claims notification. If your business has changed in the past year, your insurance should change with it.

It is also worth seeking professional assistance where your activities span multiple risk areas, such as personal training, nutrition guidance, children’s programs, rehabilitation-style exercise or events. A broker or specialist adviser can help identify exclusions, conditions and documentation requirements before they become a claims problem.

The draft code will not solve every affordability issue facing small businesses, and industry groups are likely to debate whether the reforms go far enough. Even so, fitness professionals should treat this as a useful prompt: keep records, understand your obligations, compare policy service standards as well as premiums, and make staying informed part of your risk management routine. Strong cover is important, but clear claims processes and accountable insurer conduct are what turn cover into practical protection.

Published:Friday, 3rd 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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Knowledgebase
Proximate Cause:
The primary cause of loss in an insurance claim, which sets in motion a chain of events leading to the damage or injury.