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Mercer Super Fine Shows Why Life Cover Needs Regular Checks

The court outcome is a timely reminder to understand what cover you hold through super

Mercer Super Fine Shows Why Life Cover Needs Regular Checks?w=400

The information on this website is general in nature and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation, or needs. Consider seeking personal advice from a licensed adviser before acting on any information.

A new Federal Court penalty against Mercer Super has put another spotlight on the systems that sit behind insurance held through superannuation.
Mercer Super has been ordered to pay $10.3 million after failures to report internal investigations into significant member service issues to ASIC, including one matter involving insurance premiums that continued to be charged after members had died.

The case also involved failures connected with member account updates, less favourable insurance arrangements, and death and total and permanent disability cover that was not provided to some eligible members. The court found Mercer’s systems for complying with the reportable situations regime were inadequate between October 2021 and September 2024. It also found that seven investigations were not reported to ASIC, while another was reported late and with information that understated how many members were affected.

For Australian households, the important lesson is not just about one fund or one penalty. It is about the need to understand how life insurance inside super is actually administered. Many people rely on default cover through their fund and may rarely check whether premiums are being deducted correctly, whether cover has changed, or whether they remain eligible for death, TPD or income protection benefits.

This story also extends a broader theme we have been following across the life insurance sector: service standards matter as much as policy features. A benefit that looks adequate on paper can still create hardship if records are wrong, claims are delayed, beneficiaries are unclear, or customers are not told when an error has affected their cover.

Members should consider reviewing annual statements, insurance summaries and fund notices, especially after changing jobs, reducing work hours, taking parental leave, consolidating accounts or moving into a different division of a fund. It can also be useful to check whether premiums are still affordable and whether the amount insured still reflects debts, dependants and household expenses.

The case is a reminder that consumers should not assume their super fund’s default arrangements are automatically the best fit. Some people may prefer the convenience of cover through super, while others may want to compare life insurance policies outside super for greater flexibility, different ownership options or more tailored benefits.

If the wording, exclusions or premium structure is difficult to interpret, speaking with an independent broker or adviser may help clarify the trade-offs. The main takeaway is simple: life insurance should be reviewed before a claim is needed, not after a family discovers the details were not what they expected.

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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