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Late Insurance Renewals Put Consultant Cover in the Spotlight

Why professional advisers should treat renewal timing as a core risk management task

Late Insurance Renewals Put Consultant Cover in the Spotlight?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.

Australian consultants rely on timely, accurate insurance renewals to keep professional indemnity, public liability and other business covers aligned with current contracts.
A recent annual compliance update from the insurance broking sector has underlined why renewal discipline matters: missed or late renewal contact was reported as the leading category of broker code breaches for the past year.

The issue is not merely administrative. For consultants, even a short delay in reviewing renewal terms can create uncertainty around pricing, exclusions, limits, retroactive dates and changed insurer appetite. Where professional indemnity insurance is required under a client agreement, panel arrangement or licence condition, a gap in cover may also place revenue, reputation and contractual compliance at risk.

The report found that failure to contact clients at least 14 days before renewal accounted for a significant share of broker code breaches. A separate renewal obligation, focused on taking timely and professional steps to seek cover, was reported as having the largest financial impact. While many breaches did not leave clients uninsured, the findings show that some businesses were exposed to meaningful risk when renewal processes failed.

For consulting businesses, this is a useful reminder to take ownership of renewal preparation rather than waiting for the final notice. The best outcomes usually occur when advisers, brokers and insurers have enough time to reassess the business properly. That includes checking whether your services have changed, whether revenue has grown, whether you now use subcontractors, whether you advise in higher-risk areas, and whether client contracts require higher insurance limits than your existing policy provides.

It is also a prompt to ask better questions. Has your professional indemnity policy maintained continuous cover? Are past projects still protected by the retroactive date? Have cyber, management liability or public liability exposures changed? Are any new exclusions likely to affect your advice, reports, digital services or site visits? These details can be difficult to negotiate close to expiry.

Consultants should consider setting an internal renewal checkpoint at least six to eight weeks before expiry, particularly where multiple policies are involved. Keep proposal forms, claims history, revenue splits and contract requirements up to date, and confirm in writing when renewal instructions are provided. A capable broker remains valuable, but strong internal processes give your consulting business an extra layer of protection.

The broader lesson is clear: insurance renewal is not a once-a-year paperwork task. It is a risk review that helps ensure your consultant insurance continues to match the advice you give, the clients you serve and the obligations you accept.

Published:Friday, 19th Jun 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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