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What PSC’s Transport Broker Investment Means for Truck Operators

Specialist placement, risk advice and claims capability are becoming more important for fleets

What PSC’s Transport Broker Investment Means for Truck Operators?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.

PSC Insurance Brokers’ investment in MA Insurance Brokers is a timely reminder that transport insurance in Australia is becoming more specialised, more relationship-driven and more closely tied to claims performance.
The deal, announced on 25 June 2026, sees MA begin operating as PSC Transport Insurance Brokers, with founders Barry Mathison and Mariann Illyes remaining involved as managing principals.

For trucking businesses, the headline is not simply another acquisition in the broking market. It signals that larger insurance groups see transport as a sector requiring dedicated expertise, not a generic commercial motor add-on. PSC has pointed to MA’s established transport client base, while adding the scale of a national network, broader insurer relationships, risk advisory support and claims resources.

That combination matters because operators are facing a difficult insurance environment. Premium pressure, repair delays, driver shortages, vehicle values, cargo exposures and contractual obligations can all affect the cost and suitability of cover. A small owner-driver may need very different protection from a multi-vehicle fleet, even when both appear to be buying heavy vehicle insurance. The best outcome often depends on how well the risk is presented to insurers, how clearly policy exclusions are understood and how efficiently claims are managed after an incident.

The move also strengthens PSC’s position in Queensland, a state with significant freight, mining, construction and regional transport activity. For operators based there, or running interstate routes through the state, the presence of a more heavily resourced specialist broker may increase access to tailored placement options. However, scale alone does not guarantee lower premiums. Businesses should still compare policy wording, excesses, downtime support, repairer access, cargo limits and claims handling arrangements before moving cover.

One practical takeaway is that transport operators should treat renewal as a strategic review rather than an annual formality. Before seeking terms, gather current fleet schedules, claims history, driver details, maintenance processes, fatigue management procedures and contract requirements. Strong documentation can help truck insurance brokers negotiate with insurers and explain why a business deserves competitive treatment.

For fleets and owner-operators, the PSC and MA development is part of a broader trend: insurance providers are investing in deeper sector knowledge. That is positive if it leads to clearer advice, stronger claims advocacy and cover that better matches real-world transport risks. It also means businesses should be more proactive when they compare cover options, because the gap between a basic policy and a well-structured transport insurance programme can be substantial when a truck is off the road.

Published:Thursday, 2nd 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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Insurance Policy Excess:
The amount you will have to contribute when you make a claim.