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What a Renewed Flood Pool Debate Means for Strata Communities

Affordability relief is back on the agenda, but mitigation remains the harder test

What a Renewed Flood Pool Debate Means for Strata Communities?w=400

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The question of whether Australia needs a dedicated flood reinsurance pool has returned to the insurance agenda, with fresh attention following severe July weather across southern and eastern Australia and the ongoing statutory review of the Cyclone Reinsurance Pool.
For strata committees, the debate matters because flood remains one of the clearest pressure points in property insurance affordability, particularly for schemes with basement car parks, lifts, electrical infrastructure, waterfront exposure or poor drainage.

Insurance Business reported on 14 July 2026 that a University of Queensland report, backed by the Australian Reinsurance Pool Corporation, has put disaster insurance and risk mitigation back in focus. The report did not simply call for a flood pool. Instead, it highlighted a difficult policy trade-off: pooling can smooth premium shocks for high-risk properties, but it does not reduce the physical likelihood of loss. In other words, risk transfer may buy time, but resilience works determine whether premiums can be sustainable over the longer term.

This is an important extension of the recent cyclone pool discussion. The Cyclone Reinsurance Pool has provided measurable relief in higher cyclone-risk regions, including for some strata policies, but it is not a broad flood solution. Cyclone-related flood cover under the pool is tied to declared cyclone events and a limited post-cyclone window. Standalone riverine flooding, stormwater inundation, flash flooding and coastal rain events can still sit outside that framework, depending on policy wording and the circumstances of the loss.

The insurance sector remains divided on the best response. Allianz has previously supported the idea of a government-backed flood pool for high-risk existing properties, while the Insurance Council of Australia continues to emphasise mitigation, land-use planning and major flood defence investment. For owners corporations, the practical lesson is that policy settings may shift, but the immediate responsibilities remain local: understand the site’s exposure, keep maintenance records current, act on risk recommendations and ensure the building’s insurance valuation reflects modern rebuild conditions.

Committees should also review how flood is defined in their policy, whether exclusions apply to wear, defects or maintenance issues, and how claim evidence would be gathered after a major event. Where premiums are under pressure, the answer is rarely just to reduce cover. A more defensible approach is to compare suitable cover, document mitigation works and obtain specialist broker advice before renewal. If a national flood pool does progress, well-prepared schemes will be better placed to understand whether any relief genuinely improves their total risk position.

Published:Tuesday, 14th 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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Endorsement:
An amendment or addition to an existing insurance policy that changes the terms or scope of the original policy.