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What Broker Growth Means for Personal Trainer Insurance

A more complex market is making advice and documentation more important for fitness businesses

What Broker Growth Means for Personal Trainer Insurance?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.

New industry research has underlined just how central brokers have become to Australia’s general insurance market, with broker-placed business accounting for $35.6 billion in gross written premiums in the year to 30 June 2025.
That represents about 46% of all general insurance written in Australia, within a total market of $77.9 billion.

For personal trainers, fitness instructors and small studio operators, the numbers matter because they point to a market where cover is increasingly specialised. The report also found that the broker-placed segment grew at a compound annual rate of 6.1% over the past decade, slightly ahead of the broader general insurance market. In practical terms, more businesses are turning to intermediaries as policy wordings, exclusions, risk questions and claims expectations become harder to navigate alone.

Small and medium-sized enterprises sit at the centre of this trend. SMEs reportedly form 44% of the broker client base, and the research suggests that four in five SMEs use a broker. That is highly relevant to the fitness sector, where many operators are sole traders or microbusinesses but still carry meaningful risk. A single client injury, allegation of poor instruction, damaged venue floor or dispute over a training program can create financial pressure that is disproportionate to the size of the business.

The key lesson is not that every trainer must use the same buying pathway. It is that insurance decisions should be deliberate. Public liability, professional indemnity, equipment cover and business interruption may all play different roles depending on whether a trainer works outdoors, visits clients at home, operates from a gym, runs group sessions, hires contractors or sells online programs.

Following recent signs of softer commercial insurance conditions, some trainers may be tempted to focus only on price at renewal. That can be risky. Lower premiums are useful, but only if the policy still reflects the way the business actually operates. A trainer who has added boxing classes, pre- and post-natal programs, nutrition guidance or corporate wellness sessions may have a different risk profile from the one described in last year’s proposal.

Before renewing or switching, fitness professionals should consider:

  • whether all training locations and activities are accurately declared;
  • whether professional advice, programming and instruction are covered;
  • whether subcontractors or casual instructors need to be noted;
  • whether policy limits match venue, association or client contract requirements;
  • whether exclusions could affect higher-risk activities.

The growing role of intermediaries reinforces the value of informed decision-making. Trainers who want finding suitable cover should compare more than the headline premium, while those with complex operations may benefit from insurance brokers and advisers who understand small business risk. In a specialist market, clarity can be just as important as cost.

Published:Saturday, 27th 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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