Research Hub · Professional Indemnity Insurance

Professional indemnity insurance:
what it means for your negligence claim

When a professional causes you harm — through bad advice, a missed diagnosis, or a critical error in judgement — the question of whether they carry professional indemnity insurance often determines whether your claim can actually be paid. Understanding how PI insurance works is not just background reading. For many claimants, it is a practical and critical step in deciding whether to pursue a claim and what to expect from the process.

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What is professional indemnity insurance?

Professional indemnity (PI) insurance is a form of liability cover that protects professionals against claims arising from negligent acts, errors, or omissions in the course of providing their services. If a client suffers financial loss, physical harm, or other measurable damage as a result of a professional’s failure, PI insurance is the mechanism that may fund compensation.

In plain terms: PI insurance means there is likely money available to pay you if your claim succeeds.

Unlike general public liability insurance — which covers physical accidents on premises — PI insurance is specifically designed for the harm caused by professional advice, services, and decisions.

Regulatory requirements

Who is required to hold PI insurance in Australia?

In Australia, PI insurance requirements vary by profession and are governed by a combination of legislation, regulatory bodies, and industry standards. For many licensed professions, holding current PI insurance is a legal precondition to practising.

Coverage

What does PI insurance cover — and what does it exclude?

Understanding what PI insurance typically covers helps claimants set realistic expectations before making a claim. The exclusion for fraud and intentional misconduct is particularly significant. If a professional has deliberately deceived you rather than simply made a negligent mistake, their PI insurer may deny cover. This does not necessarily extinguish your right to pursue the professional directly — but it may affect the practical recoverability of any judgement.

Typically covered

Commonly excluded

Policy structure

Claims-made versus occurrence-based policies

Most PI insurance in Australia operates on a claims made basis. This means the policy that responds is the one in force at the time the claim is made — not necessarily the policy in force when the negligence occurred.

This has important practical implications for claimants:

If you are unsure whether a professional’s current or former PI insurance will cover your claim, specialist legal advice is strongly recommended before taking any steps.

The claims process

How your negligence claim interacts with a professional's PI insurer

When you bring a professional negligence claim, you are not (in most cases) suing the insurance company directly. You are suing the professional. The PI insurer typically steps in behind the scenes to:

This matters because the insurer has a significant role in how claims are negotiated and resolved. PI insurers are experienced commercial entities with dedicated legal teams. For claimants without specialist representation, this can create a meaningful imbalance in negotiations.

It is also worth noting that insurers have a commercial interest in limiting payouts. Having a specialist professional negligence lawyer in your corner levels that playing field considerably.

When cover is absent

What happens when a professional has no PI insurance — or insufficient cover?

This is one of the most difficult situations a claimant can face. If a professional was unregistered, failed to maintain required cover, has since become insolvent, or held a policy with limits too low to cover the full extent of your loss, recovery of compensation may be complex. Depending on the profession and jurisdiction, some options may be available:

A specialist professional negligence lawyer can assess which avenues are available in your particular situation.

Claim viability

Why PI insurance matters when you're deciding whether to pursue a claim

For a claimant, the existence of PI insurance is not just relevant — it is often central to whether a claim is worth pursuing. A claimant who obtains a judgement against an uninsured professional with no assets has a document on paper and nothing in practice.

This does not mean claims against uninsured professionals are never worth bringing. But it does mean a thorough assessment of the professional’s insurance status is part of any sound claim evaluation.

When Fair Go Australia assesses a potential claim, we look carefully at whether the professional holds current PI cover, the approximate policy limits, whether there are any insolvency or licensing issues, and whether the claim sits within the relevant limitation period to engage the available policy.

How we can help

Navigating the PI insurance landscape with specialist support

Professional negligence claims involving PI insurers are not straightforward. The insurer controls the pace, the defence strategy, and the settlement process. Without specialist representation, many claimants accept early settlements that do not fully reflect the extent of their loss.

Fair Go Australia connects claimants with specialist professional negligence lawyers who understand how PI insurers operate, how to properly document and quantify a claim, and how to negotiate outcomes that fairly reflect the harm suffered.

Every assessment begins with a free, confidential case evaluation — a conversation to determine whether your claim has merit, whether PI coverage is likely available, and what realistic recovery may look like in your situation.

Common questions

Frequently asked questions

No. Requirements vary by profession and jurisdiction. Solicitors, financial advisers, and health practitioners registered with AHPRA are generally required to hold PI insurance as a condition of registration or licensing. Other professions, such as IT consultants, are not universally required to do so, though industry bodies and commercial contracts often require it as a practical matter.
In many cases, you can check through the relevant regulatory body. ASIC’s financial adviser register, state law society registers, and AHPRA’s practitioner register all contain registration information. However, these registers do not always confirm current policy limits or scope. A specialist lawyer can assist with more detailed investigations where necessary.
This can happen where the insurer denies coverage — for example, on the basis that the claim falls outside the policy period, involves intentional misconduct, or was a known circumstance at inception. If an insurer wrongly denies cover, the professional may have separate rights against the insurer. As a claimant, you generally continue to pursue the professional directly — the dispute between the professional and their insurer does not affect your underlying claim.
Not necessarily. PI policies carry limits — a maximum amount the insurer will pay per claim or in any given year. If your losses exceed those limits, you may need to pursue the professional directly for the balance. The practical recoverability of amounts above policy limits depends on the professional’s own financial position.
If a professional’s PI policy has lapsed since the negligence occurred, there may be no current policy to respond to your claim. This makes it critical to investigate insurance status early. In some cases the professional may hold “run-off” cover for a period after ceasing practice. The limitation period for your claim — generally three years from awareness of the negligence — is directly relevant to which policy may apply.
This depends on the profession: ASIC for financial services licence holders; AHPRA for registered health practitioners; the relevant state Law Society or Bar Association for solicitors and barristers; and state-based architects’ and engineers’ registration bodies for those professions. APRA also plays a broader oversight role in the Australian insurance sector.

Not sure where to start? Let's talk through your situation.

A free, confidential case evaluation costs you nothing and gives you a clear picture of your options. Speak with a specialist professional negligence lawyer today.

Our goal is to help people in the best way possible. this is a basic principle in every case and cause for success. contact us today for a free consultation. 

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