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Vero’s No-Commission Strata Launch Adds Fresh Pressure to a Changing Market

A new residential strata product could reshape how committees think about transparency, defects and advice

Vero’s No-Commission Strata Launch Adds Fresh Pressure to a Changing Market?w=400

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Vero has entered the residential strata market with a nil-commission product aimed at addressing some of the placement challenges facing owners corporations, particularly in higher-risk regions.
The product will initially be available through intermediaries in Far North Queensland and Darwin, with a broader national rollout planned in stages.

For strata committees, the timing is important. The debate over commissions, disclosure and conflicts of interest has become one of the defining issues in strata insurance Australia. A no-commission structure does not automatically make a policy cheaper or better, but it can make the cost of insurance advice and placement easier to separate from the premium itself. That distinction matters for committees trying to explain renewal decisions to lot owners who are already dealing with cost-of-living pressures and rising levies.

The launch also signals that major insurers see an opportunity in a sector that has become more complex, not less. Suncorp had already identified strata as a growth area after shifting the line from its consumer portfolio into a commercial setting. Vero’s move places residential strata within its specialty lines suite, suggesting the insurer views the class as requiring more tailored underwriting, distribution and risk expertise.

One of the most notable features is Vero’s stated approach to building defects. Committees are often told to disclose known defects, yet many fear that transparency can lead to declined cover or steep premium increases. Vero’s model appears to place more emphasis on whether defects are being assessed, managed and remediated. If applied consistently, that could encourage better disclosure and more constructive conversations between insurers, strata managers, committees and brokers.

That said, owners corporations should avoid treating any new product as a simple solution. Nil commission does not remove the need to test policy limits, exclusions, claims handling, defect treatment, catastrophe exposure and overall value. In cyclone-prone or weather-exposed locations such as northern Queensland and the Northern Territory, the real question is whether the policy’s pricing and conditions match the building’s risk profile and maintenance plan.

This is a useful market development, especially for committees seeking more transparent remuneration models and more choice in difficult placement areas. It is also a reminder that the best renewal process remains evidence-based: understand the building’s condition, document remediation work, ask how defects are being priced and compare options for strata insurance before recommending cover to owners.

Published:Sunday, 28th 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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