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Home » Insurance » Insurance QLD » QLD: Is flood insurance mandatory for bodies corporate in Queensland?

QLD: Is flood insurance mandatory for bodies corporate in Queensland?

Published August 4, 2025 By Todd Garsden, Mahoneys Leave a Comment Last Updated August 18, 2025

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Last week’s LookUpStrata webinar examined whether flood insurance is mandatory for bodies corporate in Queensland. The session featured Will Marquand from Tower Body Corporate, Todd Garsden from Mahoneys, and Tyrone Shandiman from Strata Insurance Solutions. Together, they unpacked the legal, practical and financial implications of flood cover, offering insights into how bodies corporate can navigate risk, regulation and owner expectations.

Michael Teys webinar

QLD Is Flood Insurance Mandatory for a Body Corporate? Will Marquand, Tower Body Corporate + Todd Garsden, Mahoneys + Tyrone Shandiman, Strata Insurance Solutions

1. Is flood insurance mandatory for bodies corporate? Legislative context & the Commissioner’s position

Building on the Issue 50, June 2025 Common Ground newsletter from the BCCM, the Commissioner’s guidance states that bodies corporate must be insured for water damage, which may include floods. So, is flood insurance mandatory for bodies corporate in Queensland? If flood cover is not present, it needs to be explicitly added. Owners may request inclusion and the committee must consider it; if denied, a motion can be taken to the next general meeting.

However, this wording leaves ambiguity. Many interpret it as optional rather than mandatory, which is frustrating for stakeholders seeking clarity.

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2. Presenters views: Tightening the interpretation

Todd Garsden from Mahoneys: Legislation requires insurance for water damage which largely includes flood. Adjudicators have contested this, but some recent rulings state that if a building is in a known flood-risk zone and flood cover is available, it would be unreasonable not to have it.

Tyrone Shandiman, Strata Insurance Solutions: Insurers vary: some don’t offer flood cover at all; others make it optional; some include it automatically in low-risk zones. High-risk properties are often excluded or face steep premiums.

Will Marquand from Tower Body Corporate: From a strict legal perspective, flood should be treated as water damage and thus be mandatory when risk is identified and cover is obtainable. When it’s unavailable, adjudicator exceptions may apply, but committees bear liability for costs if uninsured flood damage occurs.

3. Insurance risks when flood cover is absent

If flood cover is omitted and flood occurs, the body corporate could face liability for repair costs that exceed what insurance would have paid. Owners might pursue legal claims against committee members for failing statutory duties. Some policies include exclusions for failure to maintain insurance, putting office bearers at financial risk.

While office-bearers and public liability insurance may respond, cover depends on whether the legal cause relates to the ownership or management of common property.

4. Practical scenarios and advice

During the webinar, presenters explored real-world examples. For high-rise or hilltop buildings with no flood history, committees may reasonably omit flood cover if risk is truly negligible and cost is material. For buildings near flood zones, panellists recommend strong consideration of flood insurance, even at a higher premium.

The key message: always request insurance quotes with and without flood cover, assess the risk, and document the rationale behind decisions.

5. Record-keeping and documentation

Committees should maintain clear records, including:

  • Flood mapping and hydrology reports
  • Insurance quotes with and without flood cover
  • Meeting minutes that explain the decision-making process
  • Committee notes or motions from owners regarding cover

Summary table: Key issues for bodies corporate

Question Presenter consensus
Is flood cover mandatory? If flood risk exists and cover is available, the decision about flood insurance must be reasonable. Omission needs to be defensible.
What are legal liabilities? Member – liability for repair costs; potential claims by owners; exclusions for missing statutory insurance.
How do insurers issue flood cover? Varies — some exclude flood insurance entirely; some make it optional; a few default to including flood insurance in low-risk cases.
Are cost-versus-risk trade-offs questioned? Yes. Committees must weigh cost, risk, and practical resilience investments.

Actionable steps for all stakeholders

For committees and strata managers

Review flood risk using mapping tools and past records. Seek insurance quotes both with and without flood cover and compare pricing. Ensure decisions are minuted in detail. If the issue is contentious, take it to a general meeting and allow owners to vote. Escalate unresolved disputes to the Commissioner for adjudication.

For lot owners

If you believe your scheme should have flood insurance, raise it with the committee. If ignored, submit a motion to the general meeting. If still unresolved, pursue adjudication through the Commissioner’s office. Document your position clearly.

For industry professionals

Support clients in evaluating flood risk and interpreting their legal obligations. Highlight the consequences of underinsurance and encourage thorough documentation of all decisions. Promote transparency, especially where flood exposure is a realistic concern.

Final thoughts

The webinar revealed that the flood insurance obligation under Queensland strata law remains complex. The Commissioner’s language leaves room for interpretation, but recent adjudications suggest flood insurance is required where there is risk and where policies are available. Until clearer legislative direction is given, the best protection for committees and owners is transparency, documentation and well-reasoned decisions.

In high-risk areas, the price of coverage is often justified when weighed against the financial and legal consequences of being uninsured. Even in low-risk zones, flood cover may be worth securing if the cost is modest. In all cases, schemes should take reasonable steps to protect their assets and act in the best interests of all lot owners.

Presentation slides

Download the slide pack from the presentation here: Is Flood Insurance Mandatory for a Body Corporate

Presenters

William Marquand
Tower Body Corporate
E: [email protected]
P: 07 5609 4924

Todd Garsden
Mahoneys
E: [email protected]
P: 07 3007 3753

Tyrone Shandiman
Strata Insurance Solutions
E: [email protected]
P: 1300 554 165

This post appears in Strata News #755.

Further reading

  • QLD: Q&A Body Corporate Emergencies – Flooding, Storms
  • QLD: Flood Insurance – A cause for disagreement in strata buildings

Visit Strata Insurance OR NSW Strata Legislation pages.

Looking for strata information concerning your state? For state-specific strata information, take a look here.

After a free PDF of this article? Log into your existing LookUpStrata Account to download the printable file. Not a member? Simple – join for free on our Registration page.

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About Todd Garsden, Mahoneys

Our clients include some of the largest bodies corporate in Queensland and northern New South Wales, but our experience spans from Perth to Port Douglas. With extensive experience in this area, we understand the body corporate industry and how it has changed due to the rise of apartment living. We also understand how individual body corporate committees function. The team are experienced in dealing with issues that arise in regard to community title schemes. We know the risks inherent in the process and are adept at dealing with all types of situations.

This gives our clients confidence that we will provide them with the best advice and advocacy in all body corporate and strata matters. Our lawyers have guided clients through all types of transactions and disputes in our years of practice.

Todd is a regular contributor to LookUpStrata. You can take a look at Todd’s articles here .

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