INSURANCE HUB
You did everything right. You took out a policy, paid your premiums on time, and when something went wrong you made a claim — only to be told no. Or offered a fraction of what you’re owed. Or met with silence that stretches on for weeks.
That outcome is not just frustrating. For many people it is genuinely devastating. A denied income protection claim can mean choosing between bills. A disputed building claim can leave a family living in a damaged home. A rejected settlement can mean a business that does not recover.
Fair Go Australia helps Australians challenge unfair insurance decisions. Our specialist lawyers work exclusively on the claimant side — no win, no fee, Australia-wide.
UNDERSTANDING YOUR RIGHTS
An insurance coverage dispute arises when an insurer refuses to pay, significantly underpays, or places unreasonable conditions on a claim that a policyholder believes is valid under their policy. These disputes can be challenged through internal review, the Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA), or litigation in the courts.
Insurers operate commercial businesses. They have financial incentives to minimise claims and, in some cases, to apply policy terms in ways that favour their balance sheet over your entitlement. That does not make their decisions correct — and it certainly does not make them final.
Under s.13 of the Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth), both parties to an insurance contract owe each other a duty of utmost good faith. That duty applies to how the insurer assesses and responds to your claim. When an insurer invokes exclusion clauses selectively, delays without legitimate reason, or denies a claim based on a technical reading of fine print that was never properly explained to you, there is a real question as to whether that duty has been honoured.
The gap between what an insurer says your policy covers and what it actually covers — properly understood, properly applied — is where these disputes live.
WHEN INSURERS GET IT WRONG
A denial is usually dressed up in policy language. But the stated reason for a refusal is a starting point for scrutiny, not an immovable outcome. Below are the most common grounds insurers use — and why each one is frequently contestable.
An insurer’s stated reason for denial is a starting point for challenge — not a final answer.
ELIGIBILITY
Not every disappointed claimant has a viable dispute — but many do, and many do not realise it. You may have grounds to challenge your insurer’s decision if any of the following apply:
If any of these apply to your situation, your insurer’s decision may be challengeable. Use our free Claim Eligibility Checker to get an initial read on your options.
THE DISPUTE PROCESS
There is a structured escalation path for insurance disputes in Australia. Understanding which stage you are at — and what your options are — is the first step to taking back control.
Before escalating externally, you are required to lodge a complaint through the insurer’s internal dispute resolution (IDR) process. Under ASIC Regulatory Guide 271, insurers must respond to most complaints within 30 days. This is a mandatory first step and creates a formal record useful if you proceed further.
If internal dispute resolution does not resolve the matter, AFCA provides free external dispute resolution. AFCA replaced the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) in 2018 and is the single external forum for insurance complaints. Its determinations are binding on insurers. Monetary limits currently extend to $1.085 million for most insurance disputes. AFCA complaints must be lodged within two years of the insurer’s final response.
Where a claim exceeds AFCA’s monetary limits or involves a complex commercial policy, litigation in the Federal Court of Australia or the relevant State Supreme Court may be available. Knowing whether AFCA or litigation is the right route is not always obvious — the strategic decision matters, and specialist advice can significantly affect your outcome.
A dispute with your insurer about a coverage decision is separate from a negligence claim against an insurance broker who gave you deficient advice. If a broker’s failure to advise is part of your situation, see our page on insurance broker negligence →
WHAT YOU CAN RECOVER
The most direct remedy is payment of the full claim — the amount the insurer should have paid in the first place. Where a claim has been unreasonably delayed, you may also be entitled to interest on the outstanding amount. Under s.57 of the Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth), an insurer who is liable to pay a claim must pay interest from the date it was bound to pay — a provision frequently overlooked by claimants acting without legal advice.
Where an insurer’s denial has caused additional loss beyond the claim itself — for example, a business that suffered further financial damage because insurance proceeds were withheld during a critical period — consequential losses may also be recoverable in some circumstances, depending on causation.
Through AFCA, claimants can also seek non-financial loss compensation for distress and inconvenience caused by the insurer’s conduct, subject to capped limits.
Australian law does not currently recognise a standalone bad faith tort against insurers. However, unreasonable insurer conduct — delays without justification, selective application of exclusions, failure to investigate properly — is taken seriously by both AFCA and the courts, and can affect outcomes and costs orders.
DON’T MISS YOUR WINDOW
⚠ Act before time runs out
Insurance disputes are subject to multiple overlapping time limits. Most policies contain internal notification conditions requiring you to notify the insurer of a loss promptly — sometimes within 30 days of the event. AFCA complaints must generally be lodged within two years of receiving the insurer’s final response letter. Court proceedings are typically subject to a six-year limitation period under the relevant state Limitation Act, but policy-specific time bars can be significantly shorter — some as short as 12 months. Missing any of these deadlines may permanently extinguish your right to challenge the insurer’s decision. If you are unsure whether your window is still open, contact our team immediately for a free assessment.
WHY FAIR GO AUSTRALIA
We are not a general practice firm that handles insurance disputes on the side. Professional negligence and insurance coverage disputes are what we do — and we act exclusively for claimants. We never act for insurers.
That means when we assess your claim, we are looking at it from the same perspective you are: whether the insurer got it right, and if not, what the strongest challenge looks like. Our lawyers understand both the AFCA pathway and the litigation pathway, and they know which one suits which situation. That strategic judgment is not a small thing — the route you take can significantly affect your outcome and your timeline.
For most people, cost is a genuine concern. That is why we work on a no-win, no-fee basis. There is no financial barrier to getting proper advice, and no surprise bill if the claim does not succeed.
Our lawyers operate nationally. Insurance is a national industry — the same insurer that denied your claim in Brisbane writes policies in Perth, Melbourne, and Sydney. We are equipped to handle disputes across every state and territory.
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