Middle East Conflict: What It Means for Your Business Insurance

Middle East Conflict: What It Means for Your Business Insurance

The coordinated military strikes on Iran on 28 February 2026 and the retaliatory attacks that followed represent the most significant disruption to global trade and travel since the Red Sea crisis in late 2023. If your business involves international travel, imports, exports or supply chain logistics, here is what you need to know.

DFAT LEVEL 4: DO NOT TRAVEL

As at 1 March 2026, Australia’s Smartraveller has issued ‘Do Not Travel’ advisories for the UAE (including Dubai and Abu Dhabi), Israel, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen. Jordan is at Level 3.

This affects roughly 11% of all international travel departing Australia each year.

TRAVEL INSURANCE

All standard travel insurance policies exclude or severely limit cover for war and military actions, including state-sponsored cyber attacks. Travel to any country or region under a DFAT advisory, including transit, is not covered for trips commencing on or after 28 February 2026.

  1. New policies and trips are not covered. Policies purchased or endorsed, and travel commenced, on or after 28 February 2026 will likely provide no cover for travel or transit to this region. We recommend talking with your insurance adviser before making bookings.
  2. In-transit travellers may have limited cover. Those currently travelling who purchased their policy before 28 February may be covered for loss of deposits, cancellation, curtailment or personal safety evacuation. Conditions apply, including leaving the area within seven days and being required by authorities or airlines to make changes to flights or bookings. We recommend talking with your insurance adviser before making or changing bookings.
  3. Do not cancel bookings yourself. Some airlines are offering refunds or suspending flights. Cancelling a booking before speaking to the airline may mean the cost is not claimable. We recommend talking with your insurance adviser before cancelling any bookings.
MARINE CARGO

War and strikes cover is already or likely to be cancelled – 7 day notice.

Most marine cargo policies include a War and Strikes clause. Over the weekend (28 Feb 2026), many Lloyd’s insurers issued cancellation notices for this cover, giving seven days’ notice. If your insurer has issued (or is about to issue) a notice of cancellation, you will need to act quickly. Limited cover may still be available at significantly higher premiums for cargo transiting the Gulf area, but this needs to be arranged through your insurance adviser.

SUPPLY CHAIN

Strait of Hormuz and Suez Canal both disrupted.

Both the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea/Suez Canal route are now effectively closed to commercial shipping. Around 150 tankers and 170 container ships are trapped or diverted. Dubai’s Jebel Ali Port, the ninth largest container port in the world and the primary hub for Australia–Middle East trade, has suspended operations after missile damage. Freight rates have already started climbing.

  • Sectors most affected: fuel, consumer goods, automotive parts, chemicals, food and agriculture (including exports).
  • Shipping costs: benchmark Middle East to Asia rates have nearly tripled since the start of 2026.
  • Recommended action: consider the steps your business took during COVID and apply those lessons now. Review stock levels, alternative suppliers and lead times.
CYBER

State-sponsored cyber risk is elevated.

Iran has a documented history of state-sponsored cyber attacks. Most cyber insurance policies now exclude country-versus-country cyber operations as a war risk. However, coverage varies significantly between insurers. Some policies explicitly cover state-sponsored terrorism that falls outside the definition of war, while others are more flexible. Now is the time to review your cyber policy cover and wording with your insurance adviser.

WHAT SHOULD YOU DO NOW?

Review your travel, marine cargo, cyber and business interruption policies. Check whether your insurer has issued a notice of cancellation for war and strikes cover. If you have employees travelling through the Middle East, contact your insurer’s assistance line immediately. Do not cancel airline or accommodation bookings without speaking to your insurance adviser first to discuss your cover and your options.

Need to review your cover? Contact your insurance adviser to discuss your specific circumstances. The situation is changing rapidly and early action is important.

General Advice Warning

This article is for general information only and does not constitute financial, legal or insurance advice. Coverage depends on individual policy terms and conditions. Information is current as at 3 March 2026 and the situation is evolving rapidly.

This communication including any weblinks or attachments is for information purposes only. It is not a recommendation or opinion, your personal or individual objectives, financial situation or needs have not been taken into account. This communication is not intended to be a constitute personal advice. We strongly recommend that you consider the suitability of this information, in respect of your own personal objectives, financial situation and needs before acting on it. This document is also not a Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) or a policy wording, nor is it a summary of a particular product’s features or terms of any insurance product. If you are interested in discussing this information or acquiring an insurance product, you should contact your insurance adviser to obtain and carefully consider any relevant PDS or policy wording before deciding whether to purchase any insurance product.

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