Insurance advices

General insurers repay $815 million for broken pricing promises

The corporate regulator ASIC says millions of customers didn’t receive the pricing promised to them by their insurance providers.
Fact-checked

Fact-checked

Checked for accuracy by our qualified fact-checkers and verifiers. Find out more about fact-checking at CHOICE

asic_logo_on_grey_background

General insurers will pay a total of $815 million in refunds to customers after being called out for overcharging and failing to meet pricing promises made at the time of signing them up to policies. 

From the start of 2018 to now, 5.6 million consumers have been affected by ‘pricing failures’ from major insurance companies, according to a report by the corporate regulator the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC). 

ASIC examined more than 300,000 documents and 30,000 call centre calls and found insurers did not have proper product governance systems in place to deliver on their often complex pricing promises. 

ASIC says insurers ignored warnings 

The report comes after ASIC wrote to 11 general insurers in October 2021 ordering them to complete comprehensive reviews of their pricing systems. 

“It is beyond disappointing that despite past ASIC warnings and action, it took our further direction in late 2021 for general insurers to comprehensively find, fix and repay their customers for these broken promises. Earlier action by insurers would have avoided much of the consumer harm we now see, with $815 million in remediation,” ASIC deputy chair Karen Chester says. 

“It’s now up to the Boards of general insurers to ensure the prompt and full repayment of the $815 million owed to their 5.6 million customers, implement the fixes needed and rebuild consumer trust.” 

CHOICE responds 

CHOICE’s head of policy and government relations Patrick Veyret welcomed ASIC’s spotlight on what he called “shameful conduct” by the insurance industry. 

“At a time when people are facing acute cost of living pressures, insurers need to do much better by their customers and the community,” he says. 

“It’s pretty simple – people expect honesty and fairness in the promises made by insurers. However, many failed in this very basic obligation. This is a shameful breach of a trust on a systemic level and insurance companies are firmly in the crosshairs of ASIC.” 


I started journalism at the Malaysian online news organisation Malaysiakini in 2013, before returning to Australia to study a Bachelor of Communications (Journalism) at RMIT in Melbourne. Before joining CHOICE, I worked for four years with SBS News as investigative journalist, digital journalist, cadet and South Australian correspondent. I've worked internationally in Malaysia and Indonesia and on a freelance basis for Al Jazeera English, ABC 730, Radio National, Reuters, BBC World Service and Deutsche Welle. I was winner of the Walkley Foundation's Young Journalist of the Year student category award in 2016 and the recipient of a Melbourne Press Club Michael Gordon Fellowship in 2022. In 2023 I was a Highly Commended finalist in the Quill Awards and I was a winner at the 2024 Excellence in Civil Liberties Journalism Awards. I am a proud member of the journalist's union the MEAA and in 2024 I was elected to serve on the Federal Council (National Media Section). You can find me on Twitter and LinkedIn. Recent articles by Jarni Groceries cost more than twice as much in remote First Nations communities Drive one of these car brands? This is how much of your data they're tracking Medical centres forcing patients to share their personal data Facial recognition technology in use at major Australian stadiums First Nations people missing tens of millions in super

I started journalism at the Malaysian online news organisation Malaysiakini in 2013, before returning to Australia to study a Bachelor of Communications (Journalism) at RMIT in Melbourne. Before joining CHOICE, I worked for four years with SBS News as investigative journalist, digital journalist, cadet and South Australian correspondent. I've worked internationally in Malaysia and Indonesia and on a freelance basis for Al Jazeera English, ABC 730, Radio National, Reuters, BBC World Service and Deutsche Welle. I was winner of the Walkley Foundation's Young Journalist of the Year student category award in 2016 and the recipient of a Melbourne Press Club Michael Gordon Fellowship in 2022. In 2023 I was a Highly Commended finalist in the Quill Awards and I was a winner at the 2024 Excellence in Civil Liberties Journalism Awards. I am a proud member of the journalist's union the MEAA and in 2024 I was elected to serve on the Federal Council (National Media Section). You can find me on Twitter and LinkedIn. Recent articles by Jarni Groceries cost more than twice as much in remote First Nations communities Drive one of these car brands? This is how much of your data they're tracking Medical centres forcing patients to share their personal data Facial recognition technology in use at major Australian stadiums First Nations people missing tens of millions in super

gio insurance logo
What to know about GIO insurance, including customer satisfaction ratings and available discounts.