Cancer Claim Decision Shows Why Policy Wording Matters
A recent AFCA ruling reinforces the need to understand claim triggers before illness or injury strikes
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A new Australian Financial Complaints Authority decision has underlined a point that is easy to overlook when buying personal insurance: a serious diagnosis does not always mean a policy benefit will be payable.
The ruling, reported on 29 June 2026, involved a claimant who sought benefits after being diagnosed with high-grade urothelial carcinoma of the bladder.
Although the illness was serious and required treatment, AFCA found the insurer was entitled to rely on the specific wording of the policy.
The dispute centred on whether the condition met the policy’s definition of cancer. The insurer, Zurich, declined the claim after reviewing medical evidence and determining that the required threshold had not been reached. The policy required more than the presence of a serious abnormality; it required evidence of particular malignant behaviour, including invasion and destruction of normal tissue. Reports relied on in the case indicated carcinoma in situ, which was specifically excluded under the policy.
For Australians considering income protection insurance, the decision is important even though the claim involved a trauma-style benefit rather than the usual monthly income replacement benefit. It shows how closely insurers and dispute bodies examine definitions, exclusions and medical evidence when assessing claims. In practice, the difference between a diagnosis that sounds severe and a diagnosis that satisfies a policy trigger can be significant.
This is not a reason to avoid cover. It is a reason to choose and review cover carefully. Income protection is designed to help replace part of your income if illness or injury prevents you from working, but each policy has its own waiting periods, benefit periods, incapacity definitions, exclusions and evidence requirements. Optional or linked benefits may also have separate tests that operate differently from the income protection component.
Before relying on any policy, consumers should check:
how the policy defines illness, injury and inability to work;
whether benefits are paid monthly, as a lump sum, or both;
what exclusions apply to specific conditions or stages of disease;
what medical evidence is required at claim time;
whether cover held inside super differs from retail or advised cover.
The broader lesson is that affordability should not be the only factor when comparing income protection insurance options. A cheaper premium may be attractive, but definitions and exclusions can determine whether the policy performs when needed most. If wording is unclear, speaking with a specialist adviser or broker can help identify gaps before a claim arises.
For policyholders, this ruling is a timely reminder to read beyond the headline benefit amount. The value of cover sits in the detail: what is covered, when it pays, how long it pays for, and what evidence is needed to access support during a difficult period.
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