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Clover’s Landlord Insurance Return Adds Fresh Market Choice

What the new underwriting capacity may mean for rental property owners

Clover’s Landlord Insurance Return Adds Fresh Market Choice?w=400

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Clover Insurance has returned to the home and landlord insurance market, with Aioi Nissay Dowa Insurance Company Australia, known as Adica, providing the capacity behind the renewed offer.
For Australian rental property owners, the development is notable because it points to fresh underwriting appetite in a part of the personal lines market that has been under pressure from claims inflation, natural perils and shifting distribution settings.

The relaunch follows Clover’s search for a new partner after its former backer, RAC, moved its focus towards direct personal lines in Western Australia. Adica already supports Clover’s motor product, while Clover’s business pack remains with a separate underwriting partner. The practical message for landlords is that the market is not standing still: some providers have been pulling back, adjusting commissions or tightening risk settings, while others are looking for ways to re-enter selected segments.

Clover has positioned the reinstated home and landlord products as flexible and comprehensive. The offer includes optional protection for home-based businesses and hobby farms, as well as variable excesses for sudden escape of liquids and natural perils. Those details matter because landlord risk is rarely one-size-fits-all. A suburban apartment, a regional house, a property with a tenant running a small business from home, and a hobby-farm rental can all present different underwriting questions.

The product will also be offered through a net rated model, giving brokers room to set remuneration arrangements and explain the cost structure to clients. In a market where affordability and transparency are increasingly important, that distribution approach may appeal to landlords who want advice rather than a purely online transaction.

For property investors, the broader lesson is not simply that another brand has returned to market. It is that landlord insurance should be reviewed against today’s risks, not last year’s assumptions. Cover for tenant damage, loss of rent, liability, water damage, storm exposure and excess levels can vary significantly between policies. The cheapest option may not be the most resilient if a claim occurs, particularly where exclusions, limits or waiting periods reduce the benefit.

This is also a useful extension to recent market commentary about broker commission reductions and insurer sustainability in home and landlord portfolios. Clover’s move suggests there is still competition for well-structured landlord business, but investors should expect insurers to keep pricing and policy terms closely aligned with risk. Landlords considering a new purchase, renewal or portfolio review should compare wording carefully, check sums insured, and seek suitable cover that reflects the property, tenant profile and local hazard exposure.

Published:Saturday, 18th Jul 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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Disability Insurance:
A type of insurance protection that pays a portion of a person's income lost due to a total or partial disablement arising from either an accident or a sickness.