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Zurich-Honey Deal Brings New Momentum to Landlord Insurance

What the expanded partnership could mean for rental property owners

Zurich-Honey Deal Brings New Momentum to Landlord Insurance?w=400

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Zurich Australia is set to deepen its position in the local personal insurance market through an expanded partnership with Honey Insurance, with landlord policies included in the new arrangement.
From October 2026, Zurich will underwrite and manage claims for home, landlord and motor policies distributed under the Honey brand, as well as through Bank of Queensland and other partner channels.

For Australian property investors, the move is noteworthy because it brings together a large global insurer’s balance sheet and claims capability with Honey’s digital-first distribution model. Honey has built its profile around quick online quoting, data-led underwriting and a more streamlined customer experience. Zurich, meanwhile, gains a clearer route into personal home and landlord insurance at a time when household and investment property risks are becoming more complex.

The partnership builds on the companies’ pet insurance collaboration announced in March 2026. It also signals a broader trend in the insurance sector: established insurers are increasingly using partnerships with insurtechs and digital platforms to reach customers who expect simpler policy administration, faster quote journeys and clearer claims pathways.

Landlords should see this as another reminder that the market is changing, but not as a reason to buy on brand recognition alone. A rental property policy still needs to be assessed on the practical risks facing the asset, including tenant damage, loss of rent, building events, contents exposure and legal liability. Investors should also check how policy limits, excesses, exclusions, vacancy rules and claims evidence requirements apply to their own tenancy arrangements.

More competition can be positive if it improves product choice and service standards. However, digital convenience should not replace close reading of the product disclosure statement. A policy that is easy to buy may still contain limits that matter when a tenant leaves unexpectedly, a property becomes uninhabitable, or a repair dispute delays re-letting.

The key takeaway is that landlord insurance is becoming more technology-led, more partnership-driven and more competitive. For property owners, that creates an opportunity to review existing arrangements, test assumptions about premium value and consider finding suitable cover before renewal. Those with multiple properties, unusual tenancy structures or higher-risk locations may also benefit from professional advice before switching providers.

As more insurers reshape their personal lines strategies, landlords should stay focused on the fundamentals: protecting rental income, reducing out-of-pocket repair risk and ensuring the policy response matches the realities of managing an investment property in Australia.

Published:Saturday, 4th 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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