Loading...
Loading...
The Australian Reinsurance Pool Corporation (ARPC) Cyclone Reinsurance Pool is a government-backed scheme that requires insurers writing home and small business policies in northern Australia to hold cyclone reinsurance through the ARPC. The pool was established to reduce insurance premiums in high-risk cyclone areas (Queensland, Northern Territory, Western Australia north of the Tropic of Capricorn, and northern NSW) by creating a shared risk mechanism backed by the Commonwealth government. Every standard home insurance policy in an eligible postcode is automatically covered under the scheme — policyholders do not opt in or out.
When you lodge a cyclone claim, your insurer manages it on behalf of the ARPC pool. From your perspective as a policyholder, the process looks the same as a standard claim: you deal with your insurer's claims team, an assessor is appointed, and a settlement is offered. What changes behind the scenes: your insurer is paying the claim from pool funds, subject to ARPC's claim definitions.
The key implication is that claim definitions can be more strictly applied for pool-covered events — particularly the distinction between cyclone wind damage (covered) and flooding or storm surge (assessed separately). Always lodge as “cyclone damage” and “water ingress” rather than “flood” to preserve your best coverage position.
The ARPC pool does not reduce your rights as a policyholder. You retain:
The ARPC pool backstop does not change the dispute resolution process — AFCA handles cyclone pool disputes in the same way as all other insurance complaints.
The single most common source of cyclone claim disputes involves the distinction between cyclone wind damage (and associated water ingress through breached building elements) versus flood damage (inundation from external water bodies — rivers, storm surge, overland flow). Standard policies cover cyclone wind damage through the pool. Flood inundation requires a separate flood extension, which many standard policies do not include or limit.
Document separately: photograph the physical breach point (where water entered — torn roof, broken window, damaged wall), and distinguish this clearly from water entering through doors, stormwater drains, or rising from external ground level.
FNQ insurers require specific documentation for pool-covered cyclone claims:
NRPG provides a full claims documentation pack as part of every restoration engagement, structured to satisfy both the insurer's pool lodgement requirements and AFCA's evidentiary standards in the event of a dispute.
Get connected with IICRC certified contractors in your area
Lodge Your TC Maila Claim