Cyber Insurance Online :: News
SHARE

Share this news item!

What Canstar’s 2026 Life Insurance Ratings Mean for Key Person Cover

Premiums have only edged up, but the real risk for business owners is choosing cover without checking value, features and fit

What Canstar’s 2026 Life Insurance Ratings Mean for Key Person Cover?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.

Canstar’s latest 2026 life insurance research has put fresh numbers around a familiar pressure point for Australians: premiums are still rising, even if the increase is relatively modest.
Based on Canstar’s direct life insurance rating work, average life insurance costs were reported to be $14.60, or 0.84%, higher in 2026 compared with the previous year’s national averages.

For households, that may sound manageable. For business owners considering key person cover, however, the message is broader than a single price movement. A policy that protects a company against the loss, terminal illness or serious incapacity of a crucial owner, director, revenue generator or technical specialist needs to be assessed on both cost and commercial relevance.

Canstar’s data also highlights how sharply premiums can vary by age, gender and smoking status. Its sample figures for $500,000 of direct life cover ranged from comparatively low monthly premiums for younger non-smokers to far higher monthly costs for older smokers. The gap reinforces why delaying a review can become expensive, particularly where a business has growing debt, larger contracts, or increasing reliance on a small number of people.

The 2026 ratings named NobleOak, Budget Direct and TAL among the national outstanding value providers for direct life insurance. That does not mean one of those insurers will automatically be the right fit for a key person policy. Direct life insurance ratings can be a useful market signal, but businesses also need to consider ownership structure, tax treatment, beneficiary arrangements, policy definitions, exclusions and how the sum insured was calculated.

For SMEs, the most useful takeaway is not simply to chase the cheapest premium. It is to compare keyperson life insurance options against the actual financial exposure the business would face if a key person could no longer contribute. That may include lost revenue, recruitment costs, loan repayment pressure, supplier confidence, investor expectations and the time required to stabilise operations.

There is also a practical warning in the comparison data. A five-star or highly rated consumer policy may be strong on value, but key person insurance often needs a more deliberate design process. Business owners should review whether cover is intended to protect profits, repay debt, fund succession, reassure lenders, or preserve working capital during disruption.

Canstar’s update is therefore a timely prompt for Australian businesses to revisit their assumptions. Premiums may have risen only slightly on average, but underinsurance, poorly matched cover or an outdated sum insured can be far more costly than a higher monthly premium. The better approach is to calculate an appropriate sum insured, compare policy features carefully, and review cover whenever the business changes materially.

Published:Wednesday, 15th 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 Chronic Illness Is Now a Business Continuity Issue
Why Chronic Illness Is Now a Business Continuity Issue
15 Jul 2026: Paige Estritori
New Zurich research has put a sharper lens on a risk many business owners already sense in their teams and families: Australians are living longer, but more of those years may be affected by chronic illness. For SMEs, this is not only a health story. It is a continuity, productivity and financial resilience story. - read more
What Canstar’s 2026 Life Insurance Ratings Mean for Key Person Cover
What Canstar’s 2026 Life Insurance Ratings Mean for Key Person Cover
15 Jul 2026: Paige Estritori
Canstar’s latest 2026 life insurance research has put fresh numbers around a familiar pressure point for Australians: premiums are still rising, even if the increase is relatively modest. Based on Canstar’s direct life insurance rating work, average life insurance costs were reported to be $14.60, or 0.84%, higher in 2026 compared with the previous year’s national averages. - read more
ASIC’s Latest Levy Estimates Put Insurance Costs Under the Spotlight
ASIC’s Latest Levy Estimates Put Insurance Costs Under the Spotlight
15 Jul 2026: Paige Estritori
ASIC’s latest 2025-26 industry funding estimates have put fresh attention on the cost of regulating Australia’s insurance and financial advice sectors. Released on 13 July 2026, the figures show ASIC expects to recover $400.5 million across regulated industries for the financial year, up 19 per cent on the previous year. Final levies are due in December 2026, with invoices expected between January and March 2027. - read more
Why longer lives may mean a rethink on cover
Why longer lives may mean a rethink on cover
15 Jul 2026: Paige Estritori
Fresh research from Zurich has put a spotlight on a challenge many Australians may not have fully factored into their insurance planning: we are living longer, but not necessarily living healthier for longer. Its Chronic Care Index ranked Australia eighth among OECD countries for overall health system performance, reflecting strong healthcare capacity and comparatively low mortality. - read more
Living Longer, But Not Always Healthier: What It Means for Cover
Living Longer, But Not Always Healthier: What It Means for Cover
15 Jul 2026: Paige Estritori
New research from Zurich Australia has put a timely spotlight on a challenge many families already understand: Australians may be living longer, but not necessarily spending all of those extra years in good health. Reported on 13 July 2026, the Zurich Chronic Care Index ranked Australia eighth out of 38 OECD countries for overall health system performance, reflecting strong healthcare capacity and relatively low mortality. However, the same analysis points to a widening gap between lifespan and health span. - read more


Cyber Insurance Articles

Cyber Insurance Claims: What Small Business Owners Need to Know
Cyber Insurance Claims: What Small Business Owners Need to Know
Cybersecurity incidents are a growing concern for small businesses. These incidents can have disastrous consequences on the affected businesses and their customers. Cyber insurance policies provide a form of financial protection for small businesses in the event of a cyber-attack. This article will provide an overview of cyber insurance claims and its importance for small business owners. - read more
Understanding the Importance of Cyber Insurance in the Digital Age
Understanding the Importance of Cyber Insurance in the Digital Age
As we dive deeper into the digital era, the topic of cyber security becomes increasingly critical. With businesses and individuals relying heavily on digital technologies, the threat of cyber attacks looms larger than ever. This introductory section aims to unpack the concept of cyber insurance as a tool to mitigate these risks. - read more
Cyber Insurance: Safeguarding Your Business Assets and Reputation in the Digital Age
Cyber Insurance: Safeguarding Your Business Assets and Reputation in the Digital Age
Cyber Insurance is a type of insurance policy that protects businesses against internet-based risks and threats. This policy covers damages and losses caused by cyber attacks, such as theft of customer information, network downtime, and damage to reputation. - read more
Before You Apply for Cyber Insurance: What You’ll Be Asked (and What It Really Means)
Before You Apply for Cyber Insurance: What You’ll Be Asked (and What It Really Means)
Cyber insurance is one of the most valuable business covers available today, but it is also one of the most confusing to apply for. Many business owners expect it to work like other insurance types, where you provide basic details such as turnover, industry, and location, then receive a quote. Cyber insurance is different. It behaves less like a simple application and more like a risk interview. - read more
Case Studies: The True Impact of Cyber Attacks on Australian Small Businesses
Case Studies: The True Impact of Cyber Attacks on Australian Small Businesses
As we delve into the digital era, the number of cyber threats that challenge Australian small businesses is significantly on the rise. Cyber attacks have become more sophisticated, frequent, and continue to disrupt the operations of small enterprises, often with devastating consequences. The need to fortify defenses against such threats has never been more paramount. - read more

Knowledgebase
Insurance Premium:
The periodic amount paid for the purchase of insurance.