income protection insurance banner 1 income protection insurance banner 2 income protection insurance banner 3 income protection insurance banner 4 income protection insurance banner 5 income protection insurance banner 6

Home | Free Quote | Insurance Calculator | About Us | Contact Us | Privacy | Income Protection Insurance

Income Protection Australia :: News
SHARE

Share this news item!

Major Life Code Changes Proposed for Australian Policyholders

Mental health cover, claims standards and vulnerable customer support are in focus

Major Life Code Changes Proposed for Australian Policyholders?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.

The final report from the independent review of the Life Insurance Code of Practice has landed, and it could become one of the more important consumer protection developments for life insurance Australia in recent years.
Reviewer Peter Kell has put forward 85 recommendations, with most requiring changes to the Life Code.
This update extends our earlier coverage of the interim review, which invited public feedback on how the Code should evolve.

For policyholders, the central message is that the industry is being pushed towards clearer, fairer and more enforceable standards across the full insurance journey, from product design and sales through to claims, complaints and support for people experiencing vulnerability. The recommendations cover mental health, family and domestic violence, financial hardship, First Nations customers, medical definitions, training, advertising, communications, genetic testing, code governance and potential ASIC approval.

The most closely watched area is mental health cover. The report recognises the tension between rising mental health-related claims and the need for Australians to be treated fairly and transparently when seeking protection. Rather than allowing broad or unclear restrictions, the proposed approach would prohibit a complete exclusion of mental health cover in standard form contracts. Any narrower limitation would need to be backed by documented actuarial or statistical data, consider relevant circumstances and be reviewed regularly.

That matters because exclusions and limitations are often where confusion begins. A family may believe they have meaningful cover, only to discover during a claim that a condition, waiting period or definition affects the outcome. Stronger Code obligations could make insurers explain these issues more clearly before customers commit, helping people compare policy options with fewer surprises.

Claims handling is another practical area to watch. The report points to improving the customer experience at moments when people are often under financial and emotional pressure. Better standards around communication, information requests, hardship and vulnerability support could reduce delays and make the process easier to navigate.

Nothing changes overnight. CALI, the Council of Australian Life Insurers, is expected to provide an initial industry response by 30 September 2026. From there, consumers should look for how insurers update product wording, disclosure documents, mental health settings and claims procedures.

For Australians reviewing cover now, the lesson is not to wait for reform before checking the details. Look closely at definitions, exclusions, premium structure and claims requirements. If mental health history, medical underwriting or complex family needs are part of the picture, specialist advice can help turn a confusing policy document into a clearer protection plan.

Published:Wednesday, 1st 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.

Share this news item:

Rate this article

0 Comments

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.

Insurance News

Why Delayed Life Milestones Are Changing Income Protection Decisions
Why Delayed Life Milestones Are Changing Income Protection Decisions
14 Jul 2026: Paige Estritori
New Zealand’s life and health insurance market is facing a quiet but important shift: younger adults are not necessarily rejecting protection, but many are postponing the life events that usually trigger it. Recent industry reporting, drawing on Deloitte and Financial Services Council research, shows Gen Z and millennial New Zealanders are delaying major decisions such as buying a home, starting a family, changing careers or launching a business because of financial pressure. - read more
Why Delayed Life Milestones Could Widen New Zealand’s Income Protection Gap
Why Delayed Life Milestones Could Widen New Zealand’s Income Protection Gap
11 Jul 2026: Paige Estritori
New Zealand’s younger workers are reshaping the traditional path into insurance. Fresh industry reporting, drawing on Deloitte’s 2026 Gen Z and Millennial Survey and Financial Services Council research, points to a clear shift: many Gen Z and millennial New Zealanders are delaying major life decisions because of financial pressure. Home ownership, starting a family and career changes have long been moments when people reassess life, mortgage and income protection cover. - read more
Why the FMA’s conduct focus matters for life insurance buyers
Why the FMA’s conduct focus matters for life insurance buyers
11 Jul 2026: Paige Estritori
New Zealand’s financial advice sector is heading into a more targeted year of scrutiny after the Financial Markets Authority’s latest conduct priorities highlighted fraud, adviser commissions and complaints handling as areas of concern for 2026/27. For households arranging life, trauma, income protection or health-related cover, the message is practical: the quality of advice, disclosure and record keeping matters just as much as the premium on the page. - read more
What Victoria’s New Building Defect Powers Mean for Strata Communities
What Victoria’s New Building Defect Powers Mean for Strata Communities
11 Jul 2026: Paige Estritori
Victoria has moved another step in its building reform program, with the Building and Plumbing Commission now operating with stronger consumer protection powers and a developer bond scheme scheduled for apartment buildings from 1 July 2027. For strata communities, the announcement is not simply a construction law update. It is a reminder that building quality, defect management and insurance planning are becoming increasingly connected. - read more

Home | Free Quote | Insurance Calculator | Income Protection Insurance | About Us | Contact Us | Income Protection Quotes |

Privacy | Site Map | RSS | XML Site Map

This website is owned and operated by Clark Family Pty Ltd (ACN 010 281 008) as Trustee for the Clark Family Trust (ABN 35 957 893 714), 43 Larch Street Tallebudgera QLD 4228. Clark Family Pty Ltd is an Authorised Representative (AR 1298860) of Unique Group Broker Services Pty Ltd (AFSL 509434) for financial product referrals and an Authorised Credit Representative (ACR 401491) of Saccasan Pty Ltd (ACL 386297). Check our licensing details on the ASIC registers: Clark Family Pty Ltd ACR, Clark Family Pty Ltd AR, Saccasan Pty Ltd, Unique Group Broker Services.


IMPORTANT: We act solely as an introducer and refer enquiries to licensed third-party brokers, insurers, and lenders. We do not provide financial product advice or credit assistance. We may receive a fee or commission from these third parties in consideration for the referral. Before any action is taken to obtain a product or service referred to by this website, advice should be obtained (from either the third party to whom we refer you or from another qualified intermediary) as to the appropriateness of obtaining those products having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs. Whilst we have our own process for validating the legitimacy of our referral partners, you should independently verify the credentials and licensing of any adviser or provider you engage. Visit the ASIC website for further information.

Web design and construction by: Clark Family Pty Ltd A.C.N. 010 281 008 Copyright 2004 - all rights reserved

Calculators supplied by: Financial Calculators Online