Commercial Motor vs Private Motor Insurance: What Livestock & Property Agents Need to Know

Published29 June 2026
AuthorRMA Insurance Brokers
6 min read

A vehicle used to inspect stock, attend auctions or run between properties is not a private vehicle in the eyes of an insurer. A look at how commercial motor and private motor policies differ – and why the distinction matters at claim time.

For Livestock & Property Agents, the vehicle is part of the office. Days are spent driving between properties, sale yards, auctions, inspections and client meetings. The sedan, ute or Landcruiser sitting in the driveway is rarely just a private vehicle, even when it is registered in a personal name.

That is the point at which the difference between a private motor policy and a commercial motor policy stops being a paperwork distinction and starts to matter at claim time.

How insurers categorise vehicle use

Motor insurers in Australia generally categorise vehicles by how they are used, not by what type of vehicle they are. The categories typically run along the lines of private use only (commuting and personal driving), private use plus occasional business use (limited business mileage) and business or commercial use (the vehicle is used as part of running a business).

A private motor policy is rated and worded on the assumption the vehicle is primarily personal. A commercial motor policy is rated and worded on the assumption the vehicle is part of a business – with more kilometres, more locations, more drivers in some cases and a different risk profile overall.

What this looks like for an Agent

A Livestock Agent driving from the office to a sale yard, then to a vendor's property to draft stock, then to another client for an inspection, is using the vehicle for business. A Property Agent driving between listings, taking photographs, transporting clients to inspections, or carrying signage and equipment is using the vehicle for business. So is an Agent using their car to travel to branch offices.

It does not matter that the vehicle is in a personal name, financed personally, or used on weekends for family driving. The use during the week is the point insurers focus on.

Where private policies fall short

“The cheapest motor policy is the one that pays the claim. For an Agent in a vehicle every day, that is almost always a commercial policy.”

Private motor policies are generally not designed to respond when the vehicle is being used for business at the time of the claim. Depending on the wording and the circumstances, the insurer may decline the claim, reduce the settlement, or treat the policy as having been misrepresented at inception.

Beyond the question of whether a claim is paid, private policies typically offer narrower cover for the things that come up in business use: tools and samples carried in the vehicle, signage, business-related contents, and the cost of a hire vehicle while the insured car is off the road and the Agent cannot work without it.

What a commercial motor policy is designed to do

A commercial motor policy is built for the way an Agent uses a vehicle. The typical commercial wording can offer cover for the vehicle on a business-use basis without the use restrictions of a private policy, a hire-car or replacement-vehicle benefit calibrated to the operational impact of being off the road, cover for tools, samples and business contents carried in the vehicle within stated limits, the ability to name multiple authorised drivers – including staff and family members who legitimately drive the vehicle – and integration with the rest of the Agent's business pack, so that motor sits alongside Business including Public Liability, Contents and Business Interruption rather than as a standalone personal policy.

It is also rated on commercial assumptions, which means the premium reflects the exposure rather than relying on a private policy's pricing being quietly stretched to cover business use.

A note on vehicles registered to the business

Where a vehicle is owned by or registered to the business, a commercial motor policy is almost always the correct response, regardless of how the vehicle is used in practice. A business cannot meaningfully describe its own vehicle as a private vehicle and the wording of most private policies makes that distinction explicit.

Fleet arrangements can also become available once the business runs more than a small number of vehicles, with administrative and pricing advantages over individual policies.

What we look at when we review motor cover

When we review motor cover for a Livestock & Property Agents, we generally walk through the same handful of questions. Who drives each vehicle, and for what. How many kilometres are travelled in a typical week and how many of those are for business. What is carried in the vehicle – tools, samples, signage, client documents. How quickly does the Agent need a replacement vehicle if the car is off the road. And how does the motor cover sit alongside the rest of the business insurance program.

The right answer is rarely the cheapest premium. It is the policy that responds when the vehicle is being used the way it is used.

If you would like a review of how motor cover is currently arranged across your business – including vehicles in personal names that are used for Agent work – we are happy to walk through it with you.

Talk to us

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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