How an Australian Insurance Broker Supports You Through a Claim

Published29 June 2026
AuthorRMA Insurance Brokers
6 min read
Related productsClaimsClaims Support

When a claim happens, the difference between a smooth outcome and a drawn-out dispute is often the person standing between you and the insurer. A look at what an Australian insurance broker does for clients at claim time.

Most people meet their insurance broker on a quiet day – at renewal, when buying a new asset, or when reviewing a program. The real test of the relationship is not on those days. It is the day something goes wrong and a claim has to be made.

A claim is rarely just a matter of submitting a form. It involves interpretation of policy wording, gathering evidence, negotiating with adjusters, justifying the quantum and, where necessary, pushing back on an insurer's initial position. That is the work a broker is there to do.

The first call: triage and notification

The first thing a broker does when a client calls about a loss is triage. What happened, when, where, who was involved, what is the immediate exposure, and what does the client need to do in the next twenty-four hours to protect their position. Some events – a fire, a major theft, a serious injury, a cyber incident – have time-sensitive obligations that a client should not be working through alone.

Notification to the insurer is then made formally, with the right level of detail, on the right policy, within the time required by the wording. Done well, notification sets the tone for the entire claim. Done poorly, it creates problems that can take months to unwind.

Preparing the claim properly

Once the claim is on foot, the broker's job is to present it in a form the insurer can act on. That means gathering the evidence – invoices, photographs, statements, contracts, schedules of damaged property, business records – and packaging it so the insurer is not chasing missing pieces.

Insurance is judged on the day you make a claim. Everything else is paperwork leading up to that moment.

For property and business interruption claims this usually involves working alongside a loss adjuster appointed by the insurer. The broker's role is to make sure the adjuster has what they need, to clarify any policy interpretation issues early, and to ensure the client is not being asked to prove things the wording does not require them to prove.

Interpreting the policy in your favour

Policy wordings are long and conditional. There are exclusions, sub-limits, definitions, conditions precedent and endorsements that change the standard cover. When an insurer raises a coverage concern, the broker's job is to read the wording carefully, identify the right basis for cover, and put that argument to the insurer in writing.

Most coverage disputes are not resolved in court. They are resolved in correspondence between the broker and the insurer's claims team, where a well-argued interpretation of the wording can be the difference between a claim being declined and a claim being paid.

Negotiating quantum

Even when cover is accepted, the amount payable is often a separate negotiation. Loss adjusters work from their own methodology and, understandably, from a starting point that protects the insurer. The broker's role is to challenge the basis of the assessment where it understates the loss, present supporting evidence, and negotiate to a settlement that reflects what the policy promises.

On business interruption claims in particular, the difference between an adjuster's first offer and the final settlement can be substantial. Getting that right requires accountant-level engagement with the numbers and a clear understanding of how the indemnity period, gross profit definition and additional cost of working extensions interact.

Managing the client through the process

Claims take time. A straightforward motor or property claim may settle in weeks. A complex liability, business interruption or cyber claim can run for months or longer. Throughout that period the client has a business to run, and the broker's role is to absorb as much of the administrative and emotional load of the claim as possible – chasing the insurer, escalating delays, keeping the client informed, and flagging anything the client needs to act on.

When the answer is no

Sometimes an insurer declines a claim, or offers a settlement the broker believes is wrong. In those cases the broker's role shifts again – to formal dispute, internal review, the Australian Financial Complaints Authority where appropriate, and in rare cases, referral to coverage counsel. A client without a broker is generally in that conversation alone, and at a significant disadvantage.

What this means for the value of a broker

Most of the visible value a broker delivers happens before a claim – placement, wording, limit setting, program design. The bulk of the value a client feels happens during a claim. The phone call answered the same day. The wording argument made on the client's behalf. The settlement that lands at the right number rather than the first number.

If you would like to talk through how your current claims arrangements would be supported, or how a claim on your existing program would be handled, we are happy to walk through it with you.

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Need help understanding how this may affect your cover?

Contact the RMA Insurance Brokers team before making changes to your insurance arrangements.

Disclaimer

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.

Information is current as at the date the article is written as specified within it but is subject to change. RMA Insurance Brokers make no representation as to the accuracy or completeness of the information. Various third parties may have contributed to the production of this content. All information is subject to copyright and may not be reproduced without the prior written consent of RMA Insurance Brokers.

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