The updated proposal involves Amwins Group and Dragoneer Investment Group, with KKR now participating as a co-lead investment partner in Steadfast’s retail brokerage business. The offer remains non-binding and indicative, and Steadfast has cautioned that there is no certainty a final agreement will be reached. The parties have moved into a soft exclusivity period, with due diligence still to be completed before any binding scheme could proceed.

For everyday boat owners, this is not a reason to panic or assume existing policies will change overnight. Steadfast is a major force in intermediated general insurance, and its network includes hundreds of brokerages across Australasia. A transaction of this scale is more about ownership, capital, distribution strategy and long-term market positioning than immediate policy wording changes for a runabout, yacht, jet ski or trailer boat.

Even so, the deal highlights a broader trend: insurance distribution is becoming more consolidated, more technology-enabled and more reliant on large networks that can negotiate access to products, underwriting agencies and claims support. For marine insurance customers, that can be positive when it improves policy choice, service standards and claims escalation pathways. It can be less helpful if buyers assume all cover is the same or do not ask how recommendations are being made.

Boat owners should use this moment as a prompt to review how they buy and renew cover. A good policy is not only about the cheapest premium. It should reflect where the boat is stored, whether it is trailered, moored or kept in a marina, who operates it, how far offshore it travels, whether racing or commercial use is involved, and what liability limits apply.

  • Check whether your policy covers storm, theft, collision, salvage, wreck removal and emergency towing.
  • Ask how the sum insured was set, particularly if repair and replacement costs have risen.
  • Clarify exclusions for cyclone zones, unattended moorings, navigation limits and named operators.
  • For fishing tours, charters or marina-related businesses, confirm that commercial marine exposures are properly disclosed.

The key takeaway is simple: large broker network changes may shape future access to products and advice, but your protection still depends on the details in your own policy. If you are unsure whether your current cover fits your boat, usage and cruising area, it may be time to compare boat insurance options or speak with experienced boat insurance brokers before renewal.

Author: Paige Estritori
Published: Wednesday 15th July, 2026

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

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