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NSW Insurance Levy Pressure Adds to Salon Cost Concerns

What beauty business owners should watch as reform debate continues

NSW Insurance Levy Pressure Adds to Salon Cost Concerns?w=400

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The NSW Budget released on 23 June 2026 has put insurance affordability back in the spotlight, with updated forecasts showing emergency services levy collections are expected to be materially higher than previously projected.
For beauty salon owners, skin clinics, nail technicians and mobile beauticians in NSW, the issue is not just a government finance story.
It is another reminder that the final price of business cover can be shaped by taxes and levies as much as by claims history, location, equipment values or the treatments offered.

The Insurance Council of Australia has argued that the figures strengthen the case for reform, warning that policyholders may face additional cost pressure if change is delayed. Business NSW has also pointed to the levy as a direct burden on companies, saying it adds a significant percentage to general business insurance premiums. The state has already referred possible emergency services levy reform to a parliamentary committee, with property-based alternatives under consideration and a report due later in 2026.

For beauty businesses, this matters because insurance is rarely optional in practice. Landlords, shopping centres, event organisers and commercial partners may require public liability insurance before a salon can trade from a premises, attend a pop-up, or provide mobile services at a venue. Many operators also need cover for stock, treatment beds, lasers, IPL devices, professional equipment, theft, glass, business interruption and professional liability exposures. When levies rise, the pressure can flow through to overall operating costs at a time when wages, rent, utilities and product prices are already tight.

This story also extends the broader affordability theme we have been tracking across the Australian small business insurance market. While some commercial lines have softened in parts of the market, taxes, underinsurance risk and claims inflation can still leave individual businesses feeling little relief. The practical takeaway is to avoid reacting to a higher renewal by simply cutting cover. Reducing key protections may save money upfront, but it can leave a salon exposed if a client injury, treatment complication, fire, storm damage or equipment loss interrupts trading.

Instead, beauty operators should use renewal season to review policy limits, check whether declared turnover and activities are current, confirm any new treatments or devices are disclosed and, if needed, compare options across suitable products. If the wording is difficult to interpret, or if your salon has multiple locations, contractors or higher-risk treatments, seeking professional assistance can help clarify what is covered, what is excluded and whether the premium reflects the real risk profile of the business.

For now, NSW beauticians should watch the levy reform process closely. Any change to how emergency services are funded could influence future business insurance pricing, but the timing and final model remain uncertain.

Published:Wednesday, 24th Jun 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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Knowledgebase
Grace Period:
A time period after the premium is due during which an insurance policy remains in force even if the premium has not yet been paid.