NSW remains unusual among mainland states because a substantial part of emergency services funding is still raised through insurance-based charges. Revenue NSW lists a gazetted insurer contribution target of more than $1.51 billion for the 2026-27 financial year, with funds collected from insurers, councils and certain foreign insured policyholders to support fire and emergency services. In practice, these costs can flow through to policy pricing, adding pressure at renewal time for home, contents, strata, commercial property and some motor insurance customers.

The reform conversation is not new, but it has become more urgent. NSW Treasury has already released an options paper outlining five possible replacement models for the current levy. The broad policy direction is to move away from loading the cost onto insured customers and towards a wider property-based approach, while protecting vulnerable households and keeping emergency services sustainably funded. That sounds simple, but the transition will need careful design so customers understand what is being removed from premiums, what may appear elsewhere, and who ultimately pays.

For InsuranceOnline readers, the practical message is clear: do not assess a renewal solely by whether the headline premium has risen or fallen. Premiums can be affected by insured value, location risk, rebuilding costs, excess settings, claims history, policy exclusions and taxes or levies. When comparing options, ask whether the quoted price includes all duties and charges, whether your sum insured is still realistic, and whether cheaper cover comes with narrower protection.

Businesses should be especially alert. A levy shift could change the balance between insurance costs and property-related outgoings, depending on the final model adopted. Landlords, tenants and small business owners may need to review lease arrangements, budgets and disclosure obligations if property-based charges replace insurance-based collections.

The wider affordability lesson is that reform may help, but it will not remove the need for disciplined policy review. Customers who are considering reviewing or enquiring about insurance online, check cover quality against real risks, and consider seeking help from insurance brokers where policy wording, commercial exposure or underinsurance concerns are difficult to navigate. A fairer funding model would be welcome, but informed comparison remains the best defence against paying too much or carrying too little protection.

Author: Paige Estritori
Published: Wednesday 24th June, 2026

Please Note: If this information affects you or is relevant to your circumstances, seek advice from a licensed professional.

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