Drone insurance in Australia isn't optional—it's a CASA mandate for commercial operators. But navigating policies, coverage limits, and premiums is a minefield. This guide breaks down exactly what ReOC holders need, what it costs, and which providers deliver the best value.

Piyo (Beginner Pilot)

Piyo: "I got my ReOC last month. Do I really need insurance, or is it just paperwork?"

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Poppo (Compliance Expert)

Poppo: "If your drone crashes into a car and injures the driver, that's your liability. CASA requires proof of insurance before authorizing ReOC flights. Without it, you're flying illegally."

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Under CASR Part 101.290, all ReOC (Remote Operator Certificate) holders must maintain public liability insurance. The minimum requirements:

Requirement CASA Standard Industry Norm
Minimum Coverage AUD $20 million (aggregate) AUD $20 million + property
Third-Party Liability Mandatory Yes, included
Medical Expense Cover Recommended AUD $500,000+
Equipment Cover Optional Highly advised
Proof Required Insurance certificate or statutory declaration Certificate to CASA on request

CASA's exact wording: "A ReOC holder must ensure the operation is covered by an appropriate insurance policy." Non-compliance = ReOC suspension.

Breaking Down Insurance Costs in 2026

Typical Premium Structure

Scenario Annual Premium (AUD) Coverage Scope
Single operator, small RPA (<2kg) $800–$1,500 Liability only
Single operator, commercial (5–25kg) $1,500–$4,000 Liability + property
Multi-operator fleet (5+ RPA) $4,000–$12,000 Full commercial suite
High-risk ops (BVLOS, OONP) $8,000–$25,000+ Premium + specialist coverage

Moo (MmowW Founder)

Moo: "Costs vary wildly based on three factors: your aircraft weight, operational complexity, and claims history. A small Mavic flying in approved zones costs less than a Matrice 300 doing BVLOS mapping."

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What Drives Your Premium?

  1. Aircraft Type & Weight

  • DJI Mavic 3: ~$1,200/year
  • DJI M300 RTK (Enterprise): ~$3,500/year
  • Custom-built mapping RPA: $5,000–$8,000/year

  1. Operational Complexity

  • Visual Line of Sight (VLOS), clear zones: lowest tier
  • Beyond Visual Line of Sight (BVLOS): +40–60% premium
  • Night operations: +25–35%
  • Populated areas: +30–50%

  1. Claims History

  • Clean record: baseline premium
  • One minor claim: +15–25%
  • Major incident or ground damage: +50–100% or non-renewal

  1. Experience & Training

  • ReOC + ASIC (Aviation Security ID): standard
  • Advanced certifications (BVLOS, terrain mapping): potential discount
  • New operators (first 2 years): potential loading

Top Insurance Providers in Australia (2026)

1. Airsafe Brokers

  • Coverage: AUD $20M public liability + property damage + equipment
  • Cost: $1,800–$5,500/year
  • Strengths: CASA-approved, fast claims, flight recorder data integration
  • Contact: airsafe.com.au | 1800-DRONE-INS

2. Aon Drone Insurance

  • Coverage: AUD $20M liability, $10M property, $2M equipment
  • Cost: $2,000–$7,000/year
  • Strengths: Global coverage, multi-currency support, BVLOS specialist
  • Contact: aon.com.au/insurance/drone

3. QBE Australia (RPA Division)

  • Coverage: Bespoke commercial RPA policies, aggregate AUD $20M+
  • Cost: $3,000–$15,000/year (enterprise)
  • Strengths: Customizable, supports large fleets, fast underwriting
  • Contact: qbe.com.au/commercial/rpa

4. Marsh & McLennan

  • Coverage: Integrated ReOC + liability + cyber insurance
  • Cost: $2,500–$8,000/year
  • Strengths: Bundles compliance tools, audit support
  • Contact: mmc.com.au

Piyo (Beginner Pilot)

Piyo: "Can I just declare insurance in my ReOC application and skip buying a policy?"

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Moo (MmowW Founder)

Moo: "No. CASA auditors request proof—either a live insurance certificate or a statutory declaration from a broker confirming coverage. Lying to CASA is fraud and grounds for permanent certificate revocation."

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Statutory Declaration Alternative (for Micro Operators)

If you operate only micro RPA (under 100g) in low-risk zones (VLOS, remote areas), you may declare:

"I, [name], declare that I operate an RPA under 100g, in Visual Line of Sight, in areas where third-party risk is minimal. I acknowledge liability for any damage caused." CASA accepts this IF:
  • Aircraft is under 100g
  • Operations are purely VLOS
  • No flights over people, buildings, or populated areas
  • You maintain evidence (flight logs) showing compliance

Reality check: Most commercial operators can't sustain this. Buy insurance.

What Standard Policies Cover & Exclude

INCLUDED (Typical)

Third-party bodily injury Third-party property damage Medical expenses (emergency cover) Legal defense costs Regulatory fines (up to limits)

EXCLUDED (Typical)

Intentional or reckless operation Flying under influence of alcohol/drugs Operations without valid ReOC Modification beyond approved envelope Cyber incidents or data breaches War, terrorism, civil unrest

Equipment & Cyber Coverage (Beyond Liability)

If your RPA is worth AUD $50,000+ (enterprise mapping platforms), consider:

Add-On Coverage Cost
Equipment Breakdown Repairs, replacements, downtime +$800–$2,000/year
Cyber Liability Data breach, ransomware, sensor hacking +$1,200–$3,000/year
Business Interruption Loss of revenue if RPA grounded by incident +$1,500–$4,000/year

Integration with MmowW Compliance Platform

MmowW streamlines insurance compliance: Automatic proof of hours flown — Insurers verify operational load Incident logging — Immediate reporting to insurer Certificate tracking — Alerts 60 days before renewal Claim documentation — All flight data linked for faster settlement Multi-operator coverage — Track all pilots under one ReOC

Cost: A$8.50/drone/month—pays for itself in reduced premiums.

FAQ

Q: Do I need insurance if I only fly for hobby?

A: No. Hobby operators (Part 101 Subpart 101.5 exempt) don't require ReOC or insurance. But one accident can result in negligence liability—personal insurance is wise.

Q: Can I get insurance without a ReOC?

A: Most insurers won't underwrite without proof of ReOC certification. Some brokers offer "pending ReOC" policies at higher rates.

Q: How quickly is a claim paid?

A: Simple claims (clear liability, minimal injury) settle in 2–4 weeks. Complex claims (multiple parties, regulatory investigation) take 3–6 months.

Q: What if I'm operating under a company ReOC?

A: Insurance must be in the company's name. The ReOC certificate and insurance certificate must match exactly—same legal entity.

Q: Can I reduce premiums by limiting operational hours?

A: Yes. Some insurers offer tiered pricing: "up to 200 hours/year" is cheaper than "unlimited." Be honest about projections; misrepresenting can void the policy.

Q: Does CASA check if I'm insured?

A: During ReOC renewal and random audits, yes. CASA requests proof of current insurance. Non-compliance results in ReOC suspension.

Renewal Strategy: Locking in the Best Rate

  1. Shop 90 days before renewal — Insurers offer discounts for early renewal
  2. Bundle coverages — Liability + equipment together often saves 10–15%
  3. Increase excess/deductible — If you're confident (good claims history), accept higher deductible for lower premium
  4. Document safety culture — Training records, maintenance logs (MmowW) prove low risk
  5. Negotiate multi-year discounts — 3-year policies often save 5% vs annual

The Bottom Line

Insurance is mandatory, non-negotiable, and surprisingly affordable when you compare costs to potential liability. A single incident costing AUD $500,000 in damages is catastrophic without insurance. At $2,000–$5,000/year for most operators, it's a business expense, not a burden.

Author: MmowW Insurance & Compliance Team Last Updated: 2026-04-08 Jurisdiction: Australia (CASA CASR Part 101.290) Next Review: 2026-07-08