Allianz will be changing its Householder insurance products to include flood cover as standard for all new customers of our Home Building, Contents and Landlords policies. This aligns Allianz’s home insurance policies with the approach to flood cover taken by most other insurers in the market. This change is planned to commence in late 2024.
On renewal of their policy, existing Allianz home insurance customers with a low to moderate flood risk who have previously not taken flood cover will have this cover included as standard. The premium impact on most of those policyholders will be modest. The average annual flood premium impact for policyholders with a low flood risk will be less than $20 before taxes (GST, Stamp Duty and Emergency Services Levy (NSW)). For some customers with a moderate flood risk, the average impact on premiums will be less than $100 before these taxes.
As a result of this change, existing customers with a low to moderate flood risk, and all new policyholders, will have the confidence that they are covered for flooding, regardless of whether it is caused by rainwater runoff or riverine flooding.
Allianz’s existing high flood risk customers with policies that do not have flood cover will be able to continue without flood cover. This is because the flood premium for these customers can be in the tens of thousands of dollars and making flood cover standard could threaten their ability to retain home insurance.
For these existing high-risk customers that do not have flood cover, in addition to the Standard Definition of Flood1, Allianz’s flood cover exclusion will also exclude rainwater runoff. This will speed up the claims assessment and decision-making process because there will no longer be a need for a hydrology report to assess flood damage claims. In this context, Allianz supports the proposal for a standard definition of rainwater runoff contained in The Treasury Consultation Paper, Standardising natural hazard definitions and reviewing the standard cover for insurance, released in March 2024.