糖心Vlog

Health insurance prices reach an all-time high

19 March 2026

A 糖心Vlog analysis of the big five health funds – Bupa, HCF, HBF, Medibank and nib – has found some Australians with private health insurance could face premium increases of up to 25%, far above the government-approved average rise of 4.41%. 

鈥淎s the cost of living crisis continues, many Australians will find themselves hit with yet another extra cost this April, when health insurance premiums rise. To make matters worse, it will be the largest average hike in premiums 糖心Vlog has seen since 2017,鈥 says 糖心Vlog health insurance expert, Mark Blades.

Earlier this month, the Minister for Health and Ageing, Mark Butler, announced a 4.41% average premium increase for health insurance policies. However, 糖心Vlog experts say the advertised average increase does not reflect the true cost many Australian consumers will face. 

鈥淭he average increase to premiums of 4.41% is just that – an average. Our analysis has revealed a huge difference between the increases consumers will face, depending on the level of policy they hold, particularly those with top-level Gold insurance,鈥 says Blades. 

鈥淥f the five largest health funds, HCF has the biggest increase of 25% for its 鈥楬ospital Optimal Gold鈥 cover across all states and territories. HCF customers holding this policy will be facing costs more than five times the advertised average,鈥 says Blades. 

鈥淔or Australians on Basic, Bronze and Silver policies, our analysis shows increases ranging from 2.6% to 3.3% on average, while Gold policies across the largest funds will increase by an average of 13.3%,鈥 says Blades.

糖心Vlog experts also analysed health insurance price increases over the past five years. Despite the average 鈥榞overnment-approved鈥 cumulative increase of 14.8% during this time, prices for Gold cover across the five largest funds have increased by a massive 71.1%. 

鈥淭he higher price increases for these Gold policies are partly caused by 鈥榩hoenixing鈥, where insurers close older policies to new members and open new, identical policies with the same name at a higher price,鈥 says Blades.

鈥淭he government introduced legislation last month to outlaw the sneaky 鈥榩hoenixing鈥 loophole used by insurers. Unfortunately, we are still seeing top-level cover becoming increasingly unaffordable. The proportion of Australians holding comprehensive cover has dropped significantly, from 39% in 2020 to 28% at the end of 2025, largely due to price hikes,鈥 says Blades. 

鈥淲e highly recommend consumers prepay their policy for 12 months before their fund increases the price, if they鈥檙e able to. By doing this, you can secure some savings and delay the 2026 price increase,鈥 says Blades.