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What Haven’s New Liability Offering Means for Restaurants

A fresh underwriting option highlights why venue risk still needs careful review

What Haven’s New Liability Offering Means for Restaurants?w=400

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Australian hospitality operators have another liability option to watch, after Haven Underwriting added broadform liability cover to its product line-up, backed by capacity from Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance.
The product is aimed at several customer groups, including cafés, restaurants, wine bars and associated hospitality risks, with a stated limit of up to $20 million per policy.

For restaurant and café owners, the development is notable because liability cover remains one of the most important parts of a venue’s insurance programme. A single incident involving a customer injury, alleged food-related illness, property damage or third-party claim can quickly become expensive, even before any final liability is determined. In a sector already managing wages, rent, energy, stock costs and patchy consumer spending, access to suitable liability capacity can make a practical difference.

Haven’s move also suggests insurers and underwriting agencies still see an opportunity in well-understood hospitality risks, despite the sector’s complexity. Restaurants and cafés are not all assessed the same way. A daytime café with limited cooking exposure, a suburban restaurant with alcohol service and a late-trading wine bar may each present very different risk profiles. Trading hours, claims history, food handling controls, floor layout, staff training, liquor service, outdoor dining and maintenance records can all influence how a risk is viewed.

That is why this news should not be read as a reason to buy cover based on headline limits alone. A $20 million limit may sound substantial, but the real test is whether the wording, exclusions, deductibles and insured activities match the way the business actually operates. Owners should also remember that liability cover is only one part of restaurant insurance coverage. Stock, contents, glass, machinery breakdown, business interruption, cyber exposures and commercial vehicle use may need separate attention.

The timing is useful for venues reviewing policies after end-of-financial-year trading changes. If a business has added delivery, catering, events, outdoor seating, new cooking equipment or alcohol service, its old insurance description may no longer be accurate. That can create problems if a claim arises from an activity the insurer did not properly understand.

The practical takeaway is simple: more market choice is welcome, but hospitality operators should still compare more than price. Check that the occupation description is precise, disclose operational changes early, keep risk controls documented and ask brokers to explain any gaps between liability, property and business interruption sections. In a high-pressure industry, clarity at renewal can be just as valuable as competitive premium.

Published:Sunday, 5th 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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