Health Insurance Help How Do I Compare Policies
How Do I Compare Policies is one of the most common questions in health insurance. It sounds simple, but the answer usually sits across the PDS, schedule, endorsements and the insurer's claim requirements. This page breaks the issue down into the practical checkpoints that matter before you buy, when you renew and when you have to rely on the policy.
Overview
How Do I Compare Policies is one of the most common questions in health insurance. It sounds simple, but the answer usually sits across the PDS, schedule, endorsements and the insurer's claim requirements. This page breaks the issue down into the practical checkpoints that matter before you buy, when you renew and when you have to rely on the policy.
What matters most in Health Insurance
The first thing to understand in health insurance is what problem the policy is supposed to solve. For individuals, couples and families comparing private health insurance in Australia, the common pressure points are Gold Silver Bronze Basic tiers, extras vs hospital cover, waiting periods, lifetime health cover loading and out of pocket costs. Those issues affect pricing, the level of evidence the insurer will ask for and whether a dispute later becomes an argument about causation, value, disclosure or the wording itself. A good decision usually starts with identifying the event you most need protection for, then checking the limit, excess, waiting period if relevant, optional benefits and the exclusions that are most likely to apply in your real world circumstances.
Typical cover and common limits
Policyholders often assume cover is broader than it is. In practice, health insurance commonly addresses hospital treatment categories under the policy tier, extras for dental, optical and other services if included and ambulance depending on state and policy. That does not mean every policy covers every version of those events. The schedule, PDS and endorsements still control the outcome. Sub limits, excess, waiting periods, depreciation, item category limits, professional service definitions, policy periods and notification conditions can all change the end result. The safest approach is to read the core grant of cover and then actively read the exclusions, conditions and claims section, rather than relying on marketing summaries alone.
Documents and evidence that usually decide outcomes
When a claim or complaint becomes difficult, the quality of the evidence usually matters more than the volume of material. For health insurance, the documents that most often matter are member number, referral or hospital details where relevant, provider invoices, benefit statements and waiting period and policy documents. If the issue is a purchase or renewal rather than a claim, the critical evidence may instead be proposal answers, declarations, prior insurer history, valuations, invoices, reports, occupational or business information and correspondence confirming what was disclosed or requested. Keeping those records in one place makes it far easier to respond quickly and accurately when the insurer asks questions.
Claims, complaints and dispute handling
A strong insurance file is chronological, specific and evidence backed. That means recording the date of the event, the date you notified the insurer, every request for information, every document provided and every reason the insurer gave for its position. In Australia, insurance complaints generally start with the insurer's internal dispute resolution process. If the matter is not resolved, AFCA may be available for eligible complaints. If the insurer has rejected all or part of a home insurance claim, For denied home insurance claims, Moneysmart says the insurer must explain in writing what part of the claim was not accepted, why, your right to ask for copies of reports relied on, and how to complain. If you ask for those reports, the insurer must send them within 10 business days. Even outside home insurance, asking for the reasoning, the relied on policy wording and any expert reports often clarifies whether the issue is genuinely about cover, evidence, valuation or process.
Private health cover structure
Australian private hospital insurance products are classified as Gold, Silver, Bronze or Basic, under rules that became mandatory from 1 April 2020. That tiering affects hospital cover only, and it sits alongside extras products, waiting periods and out of pocket costs. A person comparing health insurance should separate at least five things: the hospital tier, the clinical categories they care about, the excess or co payment, extras inclusion and annual limits. If the concern is timing, the waiting period rules are just as important as the headline tier name.
How to use this page effectively
Use this page to narrow the issue before you act. Identify whether your problem is selection, renewal, claim lodgement, claim delay, denial, underpayment, complaint handling or comparison. Once you know that, gather the relevant policy wording and supporting documents, keep your timeline straight and move to the more specific sub pages linked below. That usually produces a faster and cleaner result than trying to solve every insurance question at once.
Common questions
What is the difference between hospital cover and extras?
Hospital cover helps with insured in hospital treatment, while extras helps with day to day services such as dental, physio or optical if those services are included.
What do Gold, Silver, Bronze and Basic mean?
Australian private hospital insurance products are classified as Gold, Silver, Bronze or Basic, under rules that became mandatory from 1 April 2020.
Do all health policies cover the same things?
No. The tier tells you the minimum hospital categories, but benefits, exclusions, waiting periods and extras limits still vary by policy.