Farm Safety in Australia: A Look from an Insurance Perspective
Farms remain one of Australia's highest-risk workplaces. A look at where the most serious incidents happen, the duties owed to workers, family and visitors, how a considered safety approach influences both claims outcomes and the cover available at renewal.
Farming consistently sits among the most dangerous industries in Australia. Safe Work Australia data has long shown agriculture, forestry and fishing recording fatality rates well above the all-industries average, with quad bikes, tractors, livestock handling and falls from height accounting for a disproportionate share of serious incidents.
For farm operators the question is not whether the risks exist, but how they are managed and how that management shows up at claim time when something goes wrong.
Where the most serious incidents happen
The pattern of serious farm incidents has been broadly consistent for years. Vehicle-related incidents – quad bikes, tractors and utes – remain the largest single category, followed by livestock-related injuries, falls from height (silos, ladders, hay stacks, rooftops), entanglement in moving machinery and incidents involving children on working farms.
Each of these has a corresponding insurance touchpoint. Public liability is generally designed to respond to injury or property damage suffered by third parties. Workers compensation arrangements are designed to respond to injury to employees. Personal accident or income protection may assist with the operator's own loss of earning capacity, depending on the cover held and the circumstances. A farm policy is the financial backstop; the safety system is what keeps the claim from being needed in the first place.
The duties owed on a working farm
Under work health and safety legislation in every Australian jurisdiction, a person conducting a business or undertaking – including a farming business – owes a duty to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health and safety of workers and other people who may be affected by the work.
“The farms with the cleanest claims records are rarely the lucky ones. They are the ones where the quad bike has a helmet, the PTO has a guard, the visitor knows where not to walk and the contractor signs in before starting work.”
That duty extends beyond direct employees. It captures contractors and their workers, labour hire workers, volunteers, family members carrying out farm work and visitors to the property in connection with the business. Engaging a contractor does not remove the need for the farm operator to consider how work is managed safely on the property.
Controls that influence claims outcomes
Insurance does not require a farm to be risk-free. It does expect risk to be identified and reasonably controlled. The controls that consistently show up in well-managed operations are not complicated: written safe work procedures for high-risk activities, induction and sign-in for contractors and visitors, helmet use on quad bikes, guarding on PTO shafts and augers, fall protection on silos and hay sheds, documented maintenance on machinery, secure storage of chemicals and firearms and clear separation between work areas and areas where children play.
When a claim is investigated, the existence or absence of these controls can influence how the claim is assessed, what further information is requested and how clearly the circumstances can be explained.
Where farm safety meets the policy
Safety practices interact with farm insurance in several ways. Public liability claims involving third parties almost always turn on whether the operator took reasonable steps to identify and control the risk. Workers compensation premiums are influenced by claims experience over time. Personal accident and income protection underwriting considers the activities undertaken and the controls in place. And at renewal, underwriters increasingly ask about safety systems, contractor management and incident history before pricing higher-risk operations.
A clean claims record and a documented approach to safety give a broker something to present to the market. The absence of either narrows the available options and, in harder markets, can affect both terms and price.
Need help understanding how this may affect your cover?
Contact the RMA Insurance Brokers team before making changes to your insurance arrangements.
Any financial product advice in this content is provided by Insura Broking Group T/as RMA Insurance Brokers AR No. 1267581. This material is general in nature and has been prepared without taking into account your objectives, financial situation or needs. Accordingly, before acting on it, you should consider its appropriateness to your circumstances. RMA Insurance Brokers is an AR of McCormick Harris Insurance AFSL No. 238979.
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