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D&O Insurance in Australia: What Directors Need to Know Before Taking a Board Role

D&O Insurance in Australia: What Directors Need to Know Before Taking a Board Role

Accepting a directorship can be professionally rewarding, but it also carries significant personal legal and financial risk. In Australia, directors are subject to an increasingly complex regulatory environment where personal liability can arise from corporate misconduct, governance failures, insolvency events, and statutory breaches.

While Directors and Officers (D&O) Insurance is a key risk management tool, it is often misunderstood. Many directors only discover its limitations when a claim arises, not at the point of appointment.

At Allied Legal, we regularly advise founders, investors, and directors on board appointments, governance frameworks, and insurance structures. A consistent issue we see is that directors focus on the prestige or commercial opportunity of a board role without fully interrogating whether their personal exposure is appropriately protected.

This article outlines the key considerations every prospective director should understand before accepting a board position in Australia.

The Personal Liability Landscape for Directors in Australia

Broad statutory exposure under Australian law

Directors in Australia operate under one of the most stringent regulatory regimes globally. Personal liability can arise under multiple legislative frameworks, including:

  • Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)
  • Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission Act 2012 (Cth)
  • Work Health and Safety legislation (state and federal)
  • Taxation law, including ATO enforcement powers
  • Australian Consumer Law and competition regulation
  • Employment and industrial relations legislation

Each regime imposes distinct duties that may give rise to civil penalties, compensation orders, or criminal liability in extreme cases.

Expanding modern risk areas

In practice, director risk is no longer confined to traditional corporate governance failures. We are seeing increased exposure in areas such as:

  • Cybersecurity breaches and data protection failures
  • ESG reporting and climate-related disclosure obligations
  • Modern slavery compliance
  • Workplace safety incidents and psychosocial harm claims
  • Regulatory investigations initiated without formal proceedings

From Allied Legal’s experience advising startup and scaleup boards, many directors underestimate how early liability risk can arise, particularly during periods of rapid growth or financial pressure.

What Is D&O Insurance?

Purpose of D&O insurance

Directors and Officers Insurance is designed to protect individuals in leadership positions from personal financial loss arising from alleged wrongful acts committed in their managerial capacity.

It is important to understand that D&O insurance is not a blanket protection mechanism. It is a structured risk transfer product with defined limits, exclusions, and policy triggers.

The Three Core Layers of D&O Insurance

Most Australian D&O insurance policies are structured across three insuring clauses.

Side A Cover (Personal protection)

Side A responds when the company cannot indemnify the director.

This typically occurs where:

  • The company is insolvent or in external administration
  • The company is legally prohibited from indemnifying the director
  • The company refuses to indemnify the director

In practice, Side A is the most critical protection for directors in distressed or high-risk companies.

From Allied Legal’s perspective, Side A should never be viewed as optional. It is essential for any director taking a role in a startup, scaleup, or financially leveraged entity.

Side B Cover (Company reimbursement)

Side B reimburses the company where it has indemnified the director for covered claims.

This ensures:

  • The company’s balance sheet is protected
  • Directors still receive defence cost support
  • Internal indemnity arrangements are effectively backed by insurance

Side C Cover (Entity securities protection)

Side C extends cover to the company itself, usually in relation to securities-related claims such as shareholder class actions.

This is particularly relevant for:

  • Listed companies
  • Companies preparing for IPO
  • Large private companies with external investor bases

Coverage scope under Side C can vary significantly and should be carefully reviewed.

Why Claims-Made Policies Create Hidden Risk

Understanding claims-made triggers

D&O insurance is almost always written on a claims-made basis, meaning coverage is triggered when the claim is made (not when the conduct occurred).

This creates a critical issue: timing gaps.

The risk of coverage gaps

Directors can be exposed if:

  • Policies lapse or are not renewed
  • Retroactive dates are inadequate
  • Notifications are not properly made during the policy period

At Allied Legal, we often recommend directors personally confirm:

  • Continuous policy renewal history
  • Retroactive coverage dates
  • Run-off cover arrangements (especially after resignation)

Failure to manage these elements can result in uninsured legacy claims years after a directorship ends.

Legal Limits on Indemnity and Insurance Under the Corporations Act

Section 199A: Restrictions on indemnities

Under section 199A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), companies are prohibited from indemnifying directors for certain liabilities, including:

  • Liabilities owed to the company itself
  • Pecuniary penalty orders
  • Liabilities not arising from good faith conduct

This means indemnity protections are not absolute.

Section 199B: Restrictions on insurance

Under section 199B, companies are restricted from insuring directors for:

  • Wilful breach of duty
  • Improper use of position or information
  • Conduct involving dishonesty or deliberate misconduct

Accordingly, D&O insurance is designed to protect against negligence and governance risk, not intentional wrongdoing.

Deeds of Access, Indemnity and Insurance (DAII)

Why insurance alone is not enough

A common misconception is that D&O insurance is the primary protection for directors. In reality, it is only one component of a broader protection framework.

A properly drafted Deed of Access, Indemnity and Insurance (DAII) is equally important.

Key protections under a DAII

A well-drafted DAII should include:

  • Ongoing indemnity obligations (within legal limits)
  • Access to company records after resignation
  • Coverage for legal defence costs
  • Survival of rights post-termination
  • Assistance obligations from the company

From Allied Legal’s advisory work, we strongly recommend directors ensure DAII rights clearly survive resignation, as many claims arise years after board service has ended.

Key D&O Policy Issues Directors Must Review

Definition of “Wrongful Act”

The breadth of the policy definition is critical. Narrow definitions can significantly reduce coverage scope, particularly in regulatory or governance disputes.

Regulatory investigations coverage

One of the most overlooked issues in modern D&O policies is investigation coverage.

Directors should confirm whether the policy covers:

  • ASIC investigations
  • ACNC inquiries (for charities)
  • ATO audits and enforcement action
  • Work health and safety regulator investigations

Importantly, coverage should ideally apply at the pre-charge or pre-proceeding stage, when legal costs often escalate quickly.

Insolvency exclusions

Insurers may apply exclusions where a company is in financial distress.

This is particularly significant because:

  • Insolvency is one of the most common triggers for director claims
  • Liquidators frequently pursue directors personally
  • Defence costs can be substantial even where claims ultimately fail

At Allied Legal, we consider insolvency-related exclusions one of the most critical underwriting issues directors must interrogate before accepting appointment.

Director Penalty Notices and ATO Enforcement Risk

Increasing ATO enforcement activity

The Australian Taxation Office has significantly increased enforcement against company directors.

One of the key mechanisms is the Director Penalty Notice (DPN) regime.

What DPNs cover

Directors may be personally liable for:

  • PAYG withholding
  • Superannuation guarantee charge
  • Certain GST obligations

In some cases, liability can arise automatically if obligations are not addressed within statutory timeframes.

Insurance limitations

D&O insurance may not respond to all DPN-related liabilities, particularly where statutory exclusions apply.

This reinforces the importance of active financial oversight, not reliance on insurance alone.

Market Trends in Australian D&O Insurance

A softening insurance market

After several years of premium increases, the Australian D&O insurance market has become more competitive.

In 2025, many organisations experienced:

  • Premium reductions
  • Broader coverage availability
  • Improved policy terms

However, lower premiums do not necessarily mean better protection.

What directors should prioritise

At Allied Legal, we advise directors to focus on:

  • Policy wording quality (not just price)
  • Insurer financial strength
  • Coverage scope for investigations
  • Insolvency and exclusion clauses
  • Side A adequacy

Due Diligence Before Accepting a Board Role

Before joining any board, prospective directors should request and review:

  • Current D&O insurance policy wording and schedule
  • Deed of Access, Indemnity and Insurance
  • Company constitution
  • Financial statements and cashflow position
  • Pending or historical litigation
  • Regulatory correspondence or investigations
  • Governance and risk frameworks

Independent legal review is strongly recommended, particularly for first-time directors or those joining early-stage or high-growth companies.

Conclusion

D&O insurance is a critical component of director protection in Australia, but it is not a complete shield.

Directors face expanding statutory, regulatory, and commercial risks, and insurance arrangements are subject to exclusions and legal limitations that can significantly reduce protection in practice.

At Allied Legal, we advise directors to approach board appointments with a structured understanding of:

  • Personal liability exposure
  • Insurance limitations
  • Indemnity frameworks
  • Governance maturity of the organisation

A director’s decision to join a board should always be informed by both opportunity and risk, with a clear view of how protection actually operates in practice, not just how it appears on paper.

Rahul Kumar

Rahul Kumar

Rahul Kumar is the founder of Allied Legal and a seasoned corporate lawyer with over 19 years of experience advising on complex corporate law matters. A recognised specialist in the startup and scaleup space, Rahul has a deep understanding of the legal and commercial challenges faced by high-growth businesses.

Having worked at both national and international firms, his expertise spans corporate structuring, capital raising, shareholder arrangements, mergers and acquisitions, and strategic governance.