According to recent industry reporting, BizCover has seen a 22% lift in businesses buying tax audit cover in the 2025-26 financial year, following a 36% increase in the previous financial year. The insurer has linked the latest rise to ATO warnings affecting small businesses in areas such as building and construction, cleaning and professional services. That last category is especially relevant to freelance designers, IT consultants, marketing specialists, advisers and other self-employed professionals who may operate lean businesses with limited administrative support.
Tax audit insurance is generally designed to help cover professional fees, such as accountants’ costs, when responding to an ATO audit, review or investigation. It does not remove the need to keep accurate records, lodge correctly or pay any tax, interest or penalties that may arise. Instead, it can reduce the sting of having to bring in paid expertise to gather documents, answer questions and manage the process.
For freelancers, the practical issue is cash flow. A compliance check can arrive during a quiet trading period, after a major client delay, or while a contractor is already juggling BAS, super, software subscriptions and professional indemnity renewals. Even when no wrongdoing is found, the time and cost of responding can be disruptive.
Before adding another policy, freelancers should review whether tax audit cover fits alongside their broader risk plan. Useful questions include:
- Does the policy cover the types of ATO reviews most relevant to your business structure?
- Are accountant, bookkeeper or adviser fees included, and are there sub-limits?
- Does the cover apply to prior financial years that may still be open to review?
- Are there exclusions for late lodgement, poor records or known issues?
The bigger lesson is that insurance works best when paired with prevention. Clean records, separate business accounts, reliable invoicing, documented deductions and early advice can all reduce stress if the ATO asks questions. For freelancers comparing protection across public liability, professional indemnity, income protection and tax-related risks, finding suitable cover should start with the exposures most likely to interrupt income.
If your business has grown, changed structure or moved into higher-risk contract work, this may also be a good time to seek professional assistance. The right guidance can help ensure tax audit cover is not treated as a panic purchase, but as one part of a measured insurance strategy for self-employed work.
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