Loading...
Loading...
Flood damage restoration cost in Australia is driven by several interdependent factors. Understanding these helps you assess your exposure and scrutinise contractor quotes accurately.
These indicative ranges are based on residential properties in metropolitan South East Queensland and coastal NSW. Commercial properties, heritage buildings, and properties with specialty materials will sit above these ranges.
Ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred made landfall on the South East Queensland coast in late February 2026, producing significant rainfall, storm surge, and riverine flooding across Greater Brisbane, the Gold Coast, the Sunshine Coast, and coastal Northern NSW. The Insurance Council of Australia (ICA) declared a catastrophe, activating expedited claims handling obligations for member insurers.
PERILS AG has estimated total insured losses from the event at AU$1.877 billion — making Ex-TC Alfred one of the most significant insured loss events in Australian history. As at April 2026, supplementary and late claims continue to be accepted across the affected region.
A critical issue for many SEQ property owners has been the categorisation of damage for insurance purposes:
If your insurer has declined or reduced your Ex-TC Alfred claim on flood exclusion grounds, review your Product Disclosure Statement definitions carefully. If the water entered through a breach in the building envelope caused by the storm rather than ground inundation, the correct categorisation may be storm water damage rather than flood. AFCA has jurisdiction over disputes of this nature and can issue binding determinations.
The IICRC S500:2025 Standard for Professional Water Damage Restoration defines three water categories that determine the restoration protocol required. Insurers increasingly require correct IICRC S500:2025 water categorisation and psychrometric drying documentation before approving reinstatement costs or signing off on make-good payments.
Psychrometric drying logs are daily records of temperature, relative humidity, and moisture content readings taken throughout the drying period. IICRC S500:2025 requires these logs to demonstrate that drying has reached target moisture levels before reinstatement begins. Insurers, loss adjusters, and building certifiers increasingly require these logs as a condition of claim payment. All IICRC-certified contractors on the Disaster Recovery platform maintain S500:2025 compliant drying logs as standard.
Comprehensive cost guide for water damage restoration — by damage class and water category.
How insurers assess Category 3 (black water) damage claims and what documentation you need.
Local flood damage restoration services across Greater Brisbane and SEQ.
Get connected with IICRC certified contractors in your area
Get Emergency Flood Help Now