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Why QBE’s New Risk Assessments Matter for Fitness Businesses

A practical reminder that prevention, documentation and cover reviews go hand in hand

Why QBE’s New Risk Assessments Matter for Fitness Businesses?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.

QBE’s release of online business self-assessment tools on 9 July 2026 is a useful signal for fitness professionals: insurers are increasingly focused on helping small businesses identify risk before it becomes a claim.
The tools, developed by QBE’s Risk Solutions team, are designed to guide Australian businesses through operational questions and provide tailored reports with risk-reduction suggestions and supporting resources.

The initial focus areas include property, liability, motor fleet and ESG. While that may sound broad, each category has practical relevance for gyms, personal trainers, Pilates studios, yoga instructors and group fitness operators. Liability risk can arise from client injuries, inadequate screening, poor supervision, unsuitable programming or unclear waivers. Property exposures may include leased equipment, flooring, mirrors, signage, client belongings or damage to venues used for outdoor and mobile sessions.

For mobile trainers and fitness businesses that use vehicles to transport equipment between parks, workplaces, homes and studios, motor-related risk is also more than an administrative detail. Vehicle maintenance, safe loading, driver fatigue and storage of portable equipment can all influence the likelihood of disruption, injury or damage. QBE’s emphasis on fleet self-assessment reinforces a broader point: operational habits often shape how well a business can defend itself if something goes wrong.

The timing is also important. Australian SMEs are operating in a tighter compliance environment, with heightened work health and safety expectations, rising penalties in some jurisdictions and growing pressure to demonstrate practical risk controls. For fitness professionals, that does not necessarily mean building complex corporate systems. It does mean keeping clear records of client onboarding, pre-exercise screening, incident reports, equipment checks, staff qualifications, class plans and venue inspections.

This story also extends a theme already relevant to the sector: insurance value is not only about buying a policy. It is about understanding what your business does, where claims might arise, and whether your public liability, professional indemnity and broader business cover still match your real-world activities. A trainer who has moved from one-on-one gym sessions into outdoor boot camps, online coaching, rehabilitation-style programming or subcontracting instructors may have a very different risk profile from the one originally described on their application.

Self-assessment tools can be a helpful starting point, but they are not a substitute for tailored advice. Fitness operators should use them as a prompt to review procedures, update documentation and ask sharper questions when reviewing insurance for fitness professionals. If your activities, locations, staffing or revenue model have changed, speaking with a broker or adviser can help identify whether your current arrangements remain suitable.

The practical takeaway is simple: prevention and protection should work together. The better you understand and document your risks, the stronger your position may be when seeking suitable cover, managing premiums and responding confidently if a client injury, property damage event or professional complaint occurs.

Published:Friday, 10th 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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