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What a Softer Insurance Market Could Mean for Personal Trainers

Why 2026 may be a timely moment to review cover, limits and risk information

What a Softer Insurance Market Could Mean for Personal Trainers?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.

Australia’s commercial insurance market has moved into a more favourable phase for many business buyers in the first half of 2026, with industry reporting pointing to stronger insurer appetite, broader capacity and easing pressure across several key classes.
For personal trainers, fitness instructors and small studio operators, the message is not that cover is suddenly simple or cheap.
It is that renewal season may offer a better opportunity to review whether existing arrangements still match the way the business actually operates.

The shift appears most relevant in areas that matter to fitness professionals: general liability, professional indemnity, property and cyber. A trainer with a clean claims history, clear client screening processes and well-documented safety procedures may find insurers more willing to compete on terms. That could be useful for mobile trainers, outdoor bootcamp operators, sole traders using rented gym space and small fitness businesses that have expanded into online programming or hybrid coaching.

However, a softer market should not be mistaken for a reason to reduce protection. Personal training remains a hands-on service where injuries, alleged negligence, equipment-related incidents and property damage can quickly become costly. Public liability insurance remains central where clients, venues or members of the public could be injured or have property damaged. Professional indemnity remains important where a client alleges financial loss or injury connected to advice, programming, supervision or technique correction.

The practical opportunity is to use market conditions to ask better questions. Have your services changed since your last renewal? Are you now offering nutrition guidance, rehabilitation-style exercise, group classes, corporate wellness sessions or online plans? Do you use subcontractors, casual instructors or shared premises? Each change can affect whether your policy wording, exclusions, limits and retroactive cover remain suitable.

Insurers are also continuing to reward better risk information. Trainers who can show current qualifications, incident logs, pre-exercise screening, waiver processes, equipment maintenance records and clear scope-of-service boundaries may be better placed when finding suitable cover. Conversely, higher-risk activities, poor documentation, previous claims or vague business descriptions can still result in narrower terms or higher premiums.

For self-employed trainers watching expenses, the key is balance. A lower premium is only valuable if the cover still responds when needed. Comparing policy limits, excesses, exclusions, venue requirements and professional advice triggers can be just as important as comparing price. Where the business model is changing quickly, speaking with a specialist insurance broker may help identify gaps before they become claims problems.

In short, the softer 2026 market may give personal trainers more room to negotiate. The best results are likely to go to fitness businesses that present themselves as organised, safety-conscious and clear about the services they provide.

Published:Saturday, 20th Jun 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.

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Knowledgebase
Moral Hazard:
The concept that individuals may take on more risk when they do not bear the full consequences of that risk, often relevant in insurance scenarios.