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Underinsurance is one of the most significant and least-discussed risks facing Australian property owners. According to the Insurance Council of Australia (ICA) 2025 figures, 23% of Australian homeowners are underinsured by more than 50% — meaning one in four homeowners would receive less than half the cost of rebuilding their property in a total loss event.
This problem has been dramatically worsened by construction cost inflation. Since 2019, rebuild costs in Australia have increased by 40–50% due to labour shortages, supply chain disruption, and increased materials costs. A property that was adequately insured in 2019 may now be underinsured by hundreds of thousands of dollars without the owner ever having changed their policy.
The 2025 cyclone season — including TC Alfred and TC Maila — exposed the scale of this problem in Queensland and Northern Australia. Many homeowners in affected areas discovered, at the worst possible time, that their sum insured was insufficient to rebuild.
When you make a claim on an underinsured property, the consequences depend on whether the loss is total or partial — and whether your policy contains a co-insurance clause.
The most reliable way to check whether your sum insured is adequate is to compare it against an independent rebuild cost estimate. There are several approaches:
If you have suffered a loss and believe your property may be underinsured, there are steps you can take to document your position and, where possible, challenge the insurer's assessment.
The most effective protection against underinsurance is an independent replacement cost assessment before a loss event. After a loss, NRPG can provide independent assessment support — but the earlier you act, the stronger your position.
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