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litigation funding and class actions Australia 2026

Litigation Funding & Class Actions in Australia 2026, What Insurers, Businesses and Contractors Need to Know

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Litigation funding and class actions in Australia 2026 represent one of the most consequential shifts in the country’s dispute‑resolution landscape in a generation. Third‑party funders are deploying more capital than ever, class action filings continue to climb, and the sectors exposed, from financial services and construction to consumer products, are expanding. For insurers managing defence costs and indemnity reserves, for in‑house counsel weighing settlement authority, and for contractors suddenly named as respondents, the practical implications are immediate and complex.

  • Insurer exposure is growing. Funded class actions drive up defence costs, complicate consent‑to‑settle clauses, and create new subrogation and allocation challenges across policy towers.
  • Indemnity dynamics are shifting. Contractual indemnities between principals, head contractors and subcontractors are being tested by multi‑party funded proceedings in ways many standard wordings did not anticipate.
  • Regulatory scrutiny is intensifying. Courts are applying closer oversight to funder conduct, settlement approvals and costs, while the Parliamentary Joint Committee inquiry into litigation funding continues to shape the policy debate.
  • Proactive steps can materially reduce risk. Businesses that audit contracts, tighten notice provisions and engage insurers early are better positioned to defend or resolve funded claims efficiently.

What Is Litigation Funding and How It Works in Australia

At its simplest, litigation funding is a financial arrangement in which a third party, a professional funder with no pre‑existing interest in the dispute, agrees to pay some or all of a claimant’s legal costs in exchange for a share of any proceeds recovered. The funder assumes the financial risk of the litigation: if the claim fails, the funder typically bears the costs it has committed to pay.

Litigation funding in Australia operates across two primary models. In the single‑case model, a funder finances one discrete proceeding, usually a class action or a high‑value commercial claim. In the portfolio model, a funder finances a suite of claims, often held by a single corporate claimant or law firm, spreading risk across outcomes. Both models are well‑established in the Australian market, and multiple litigation funders in Australia now maintain dedicated teams targeting specific sectors.

How Funders Make Money

Funder returns are typically structured as either a multiple of the amount funded (for example, two to three times the capital deployed) or as a percentage of the gross recovery, commonly ranging from 20 per cent to 40 per cent depending on the complexity and risk profile of the claim. These economics create a strong incentive for funders to pursue claims with high potential recoveries and manageable litigation risk, which is precisely why class actions, with their aggregated damages, are the dominant funded claim type.

Funding Agreement Key Clauses, Control, Confidentiality and Settlement Approval

Funding agreements are private contracts, but several standard clauses have direct implications for defendants and their insurers. Most agreements grant the funder a degree of influence, and in some cases effective control, over key litigation decisions, including whether to accept a settlement offer. Confidentiality provisions typically restrict the claimant from disclosing the terms of funding without the funder’s consent. Settlement approval clauses are particularly significant: they usually require the funder’s written consent before any settlement can be finalised, creating a dynamic where three parties (claimant, funder and defendant/insurer) must align before a resolution is reached.

Courts have increasingly scrutinised these control clauses. As highlighted in recent commentary on Australian judicial decisions, the boundaries of permissible funder influence over litigation strategy and settlement remain a live and evolving area of case law.

Litigation Funding and Class Actions Australia 2026, Market Snapshot, Trends and Case Law

The growth trajectory of class actions in 2026 in Australia shows no sign of plateauing. Industry analysis identifies several converging drivers: increasing funder capitalisation, expansion into new sectors, growing plaintiff awareness, and a judiciary that, while applying greater scrutiny, continues to permit funded proceedings to advance to trial or settlement.

Market Numbers and Sector Exposure

According to the Chambers Practice Guides, Litigation Funding 2026, class actions continue to represent a dominant share of funder revenue in Australia, reflecting the economics of aggregated claims. The Legal 500’s litigation outlook for 2026 similarly notes the expansion of funded proceedings into sectors beyond financial services, including construction defects, environmental claims, data breaches and consumer product liability. Ashurst’s analysis of Australian disputes trends corroborates this expansion, identifying ESG‑related and regulatory‑triggered claims as emerging growth areas for third‑party funding in Australia.

Industry observers expect this broadening of sectors to accelerate throughout 2026, driven by both funder appetite and by the availability of large, identifiable class‑member pools in areas like residential construction and franchising.

Notable 2026 Decisions and Implications

Recent superior court decisions have refined the boundaries of funder conduct in significant ways. Clifford Chance’s April 2026 analysis examines a series of rulings addressing funder disclosure obligations, the enforceability of control clauses, and the circumstances in which courts will intervene to protect class members’ interests against disproportionate funder returns. The likely practical effect of these decisions is to impose greater transparency requirements on funders at settlement approval stage, a development with direct implications for defendants and insurers assessing the dynamics of any negotiated resolution.

Period Development Implication for Defendants and Insurers
2020 Parliamentary Joint Committee inquiry into litigation funding commences Recommendations shape ongoing regulatory debate; compliance and disclosure expectations tighten
2024–2025 Funded class actions expand into construction defects and data breaches Broader exposure for contractors and technology companies; new policy‑wording challenges for insurers
Early 2026 Courts issue key decisions on funder control, disclosure and settlement approval Greater scrutiny of funder returns; defendants gain leverage to challenge disproportionate funding terms
Mid‑2026 ESG and consumer product funded claims increase Directors’ and officers’ liability policies and product liability towers face new funded claim pressure

Who Regulates Funders and Key Legal Constraints

Unlike many financial services participants, litigation funders in Australia operate within a regulatory framework that remains fragmented and evolving. Understanding the current constraints is essential for any party on the receiving end of a funded claim.

Parliamentary Recommendations and Current Status

The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Corporations and Financial Services inquiry into litigation funding produced a series of recommendations addressing funder licensing, conflicts of interest and the adequacy of regulatory oversight. Key recommendations included proposals for funders to hold an Australian Financial Services Licence and for greater disclosure of funding terms to class members. The policy debate remains ongoing, and the extent to which these recommendations will be enacted into binding regulation continues to be a source of uncertainty for all market participants.

Court Oversight and Ethical Considerations

In the absence of comprehensive legislative reform, courts have assumed an active supervisory role. The Federal Court of Australia requires disclosure of funding arrangements in class action proceedings and conducts approval hearings before any funded settlement can take effect. These hearings assess whether the proposed settlement is fair and reasonable for class members, including whether the funder’s commission is proportionate to the risk assumed. This judicial oversight function acts as a de facto regulatory mechanism, and one that defendants and insurers can engage with strategically.

How Funded Litigation Changes the Insurer Landscape, Exposures and Claims Handling

The funded litigation insurance impact is felt across virtually every stage of the claims lifecycle. From notification through to settlement or judgment, the presence of a third‑party funder alters the dynamics that insurers and claims managers rely upon.

At the notification stage, insurers must consider whether the insured has complied with policy notification requirements and whether the funded nature of the claim triggers any specific policy provisions. Many liability policies contain cooperation clauses and consent‑to‑settle provisions that were drafted long before third‑party funding became commonplace, and their application in a funded context can be ambiguous.

Defence costs present a particular challenge. Funded plaintiffs typically have access to substantial litigation budgets, enabling them to pursue extensive discovery, retain multiple experts, and sustain proceedings through interlocutory stages that might otherwise be commercially unviable. Insurers funding the defence must budget accordingly and consider early case assessment as a cost‑management tool.

Indemnity and litigation funding intersect most sharply at the settlement stage. Where a policy requires the insurer’s consent to settle, the presence of a funder, who also holds settlement consent rights under the funding agreement, creates a three‑party negotiation. Misalignment between any two parties can delay resolution, increase costs and generate coverage disputes.

Coverage Disputes in Funded Proceedings

Common coverage issues arising in funded class actions include disputes over the scope of “loss” or “claim” definitions, the application of related‑claims provisions (which may aggregate multiple funded proceedings), and the operation of exclusions for contractual liability, which may be triggered depending on the nature of the underlying claim. The Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth) imposes obligations of utmost good faith and regulates the circumstances in which insurers may refuse indemnity, requirements that apply regardless of whether a claim is funded.

Entity Type Reporting / Notice Obligations Settlement Approval / Control Trigger
Insurers (primary liability policies) Policy notification, cooperation and defence rights; review coverage wording and consent‑to‑settle clauses Consent to settle in policy; insurer may withhold consent if settlement impacts subrogation or excess allocation
Policyholders / contractors Contractual notice to insurers and indemnitors; preserve records and data; escalate to legal team promptly Settlement requires insurer consent where policy wording demands; may need indemnifier consent under contract
Third‑party funders No statutory reporting obligation, but must comply with funding agreement and court disclosure at approval hearings Funding agreements typically include settlement consent clauses; courts scrutinise funder interest at approval hearings

Practical Claims Handling Checklist for Insurers

  • Review policy wording immediately. Identify consent‑to‑settle provisions, cooperation clauses, defence‑costs caps and any aggregation or related‑claims language.
  • Assess notification compliance. Determine whether the insured gave timely notice and whether any prejudice arises from delay.
  • Appoint specialist panel counsel early. Funded class actions require defence lawyers experienced in both the substantive claim area and funder‑specific procedural tactics.
  • Reserve adequately for defence costs. The extended duration and discovery burden of funded claims often exceed initial estimates.
  • Monitor funder disclosure orders. Court orders requiring disclosure of funding terms can reveal the funder’s economics and risk appetite, informing settlement strategy.
  • Coordinate across policy layers. Where excess or umbrella policies are engaged, ensure alignment on defence strategy and settlement authority.

Indemnity, Contractual Protections and Practical Advice for Policyholders and Contractors

For businesses and contractors, the rise of litigation funding and class actions in Australia 2026 makes contractual risk allocation more important than ever. Funded proceedings can target multiple parties in a supply chain, principal, head contractor, subcontractors and consultants, and the adequacy of indemnity provisions will determine where economic loss ultimately falls.

Indemnity Drafting Checklist

  • Mutual notification obligations. Ensure all contracts require immediate written notice of any claim, threatened claim or funder approach, with specific reference to third‑party funded proceedings.
  • Cooperation and defence clauses. Require counterparties to cooperate in the defence of funded claims, including providing access to documents and witnesses.
  • Proportionate liability limitations. Where applicable, structure indemnities to reflect proportionate liability principles, reducing the risk of one party bearing disproportionate exposure in a multi‑defendant funded action.
  • Insurance procurement obligations. Specify minimum insurance requirements, including professional indemnity and public liability, with endorsement language that addresses funded proceedings.
  • Preservation of records. Mandate document and data retention for specified periods beyond project completion, funded class actions frequently arise years after the events giving rise to the claim.

When to Involve Your Insurer and Outside Counsel

Early engagement is critical. The moment a business becomes aware of a funded claim, or even preliminary funder activity targeting its sector, it should notify its insurer and seek legal advice. Delay in notification can prejudice coverage rights. Early involvement of outside counsel allows the business to assess its exposure, identify co‑defendants, and begin preserving evidence before the funder’s solicitors issue formal correspondence or file proceedings.

Defending Funded Class Actions in Australia, a Litigation Playbook for Defendants

Defending class actions in Australia where a third‑party funder is involved requires a distinct strategic approach. The funder’s commercial objectives, maximising return on invested capital within a defined timeframe, create both pressure points and opportunities for defendants.

Evidence Strategy Versus Funded Plaintiffs

Funded plaintiffs typically have resources to pursue broad discovery and engage multiple experts. Defendants should counter with disciplined document management, early identification of privileged material, and targeted objections to over‑broad discovery requests. A pre‑action audit, reviewing internal records, communications, contracts and compliance files before proceedings are filed, is one of the most effective steps a defendant can take. This audit identifies both vulnerabilities and strengths, enabling counsel to develop a case theory early.

In opt‑out class actions, defendants should also consider whether the class definition is appropriately narrow and whether strike‑out or summary‑judgment applications can reduce the scope of the claim. Challenging the class definition at an early stage can materially affect the funder’s economics and, by extension, the funder’s appetite for continuing the litigation.

Settlement Negotiation Levers, Confidentiality, Security for Costs and Funder Disclosure

Settlement negotiations in funded proceedings are shaped by the funder’s need for a return that justifies its investment. Defendants and their insurers can use this dynamic strategically by demanding early disclosure of funding terms, applying for security for costs orders that increase the funder’s capital commitment, and structuring settlement offers that exploit the gap between what the funder needs and what class members might accept.

Confidentiality remains a powerful tool. Many funders, particularly those with publicly listed parent entities, are sensitive to reputational risk and may prefer confidential settlements over public judgments. Defendants who understand a funder’s commercial pressures are better placed to negotiate favourable outcomes. As Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer’s analysis notes, a deep understanding of funder economics is increasingly a prerequisite for effective class action defence.

Settlement, Security for Costs and Funder Exposure

A critical question for defendants and insurers is whether a litigation funder can be held liable for adverse costs or ordered to provide security for costs. Australian courts have confirmed that they possess jurisdiction to make such orders in appropriate circumstances. Where a funded plaintiff has no assets within the jurisdiction, a common scenario in class actions brought by representative plaintiffs with modest individual claims, courts may order the funder to provide security for the defendant’s costs.

The practical significance of a security‑for‑costs order is substantial: it requires the funder to commit additional capital to the proceeding, increasing the funder’s downside risk and, in some cases, prompting a reassessment of whether the claim remains commercially viable. Funding agreements typically include indemnities under which the funder agrees to meet any adverse costs order, but the enforceability and scope of these indemnities vary. The Federal Court’s class actions guidance addresses the procedural framework for these applications, and recent decisions discussed by Clifford Chance have further clarified the court’s approach.

Practical Checklist, 10 Immediate Steps for Insurers, Claims Teams and Contractors

  1. Audit all current liability policies for consent‑to‑settle, cooperation, notification and aggregation provisions.
  2. Review and update contractual indemnity clauses to address third‑party funded proceedings explicitly.
  3. Establish a monitoring protocol for Federal Court class action filings relevant to your sector.
  4. Notify insurers immediately upon becoming aware of any funded claim or funder approach.
  5. Appoint specialist panel counsel experienced in defending funded class actions in Australia.
  6. Conduct a pre‑action document and data audit, identifying privileged material and preserving key records.
  7. Reserve adequately for extended defence costs, funded proceedings typically run longer than unfunded disputes.
  8. Coordinate with co‑defendants and insurers across policy layers to align defence strategy.
  9. Consider early mediation or without‑prejudice engagement to test resolution prospects before costs escalate.
  10. Monitor developments in funder regulation, including Parliamentary recommendations and court guidance, and adjust risk‑management frameworks accordingly.

Conclusion, Recommended Next Steps for Insurers, Businesses and Contractors

The landscape of litigation funding and class actions in Australia 2026 demands a proactive, informed response from every party with potential exposure. The combination of growing funder capital, expanding sector coverage and evolving judicial expectations makes a wait‑and‑see approach untenable.

Three immediate priorities stand out. First, insurers and claims teams should review policy wordings and reserving assumptions against the specific pressures created by funded proceedings. Second, businesses and contractors should audit their contractual indemnity frameworks, tightening notification, cooperation and insurance procurement clauses. Third, all parties should invest in understanding funder economics and litigation strategy, because the most effective defence against a funded class action begins with knowing what the funder needs to achieve. Qualified Australian litigation practitioners with direct experience of funded proceedings can provide tailored guidance on each of these steps.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Rockliffs Lawyers at Rockliffs Lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Chambers Practice Guides, Litigation Funding 2026 (Australia)
  2. Clifford Chance, Drawing the lines: recent Australian decisions on litigation funding (April 2026)
  3. Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer, Six trends shaping class action risk (April 2026)
  4. Ashurst, Current trends in Australian disputes 2025–26
  5. Parliament of Australia, Litigation funding inquiry
  6. Federal Court of Australia, Class actions
  7. Lawyers Weekly, 6 trends set to redefine class action risk in Australia in 2026
  8. Claims Funding Australia
  9. Legal 500, Australia’s litigation outlook for 2026
  10. Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth)

FAQs

What is litigation funding and how does it work in Australia?
Litigation funding is a financial arrangement where a third‑party funder pays a claimant’s legal costs in exchange for a share of any recovery. If the claim fails, the funder typically bears the costs. Funders in Australia finance both individual high‑value commercial claims and class actions, as outlined in the Chambers Practice Guides, Litigation Funding 2026.
Early indications suggest yes. Funder capitalisation is growing, new sectors are being targeted, including construction, data breaches and ESG claims, and plaintiff‑side awareness of funding options is rising. Both Chambers and Lawyers Weekly identify funded class actions as a defining litigation trend for 2026 in Australia.
Funded claims increase defence costs, complicate consent‑to‑settle provisions and create three‑party settlement dynamics (insurer, insured, funder). Coverage disputes may arise around aggregation, notification timing and the scope of indemnity. The Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth) imposes obligations of utmost good faith that apply regardless of funding.
No single regulator currently oversees litigation funders comprehensively. The Parliamentary Joint Committee inquiry into litigation funding recommended licensing and disclosure reforms, many of which remain under consideration. Courts exercise oversight through disclosure orders and settlement approval hearings.
Yes. Australian courts have jurisdiction to order funders to provide security for a defendant’s costs and, in certain circumstances, to meet adverse costs orders. These applications are governed by the Federal Court’s class actions procedures and have been the subject of recent judicial decisions analysed by Clifford Chance.
Notify your insurer immediately, preserve all documents and data, do not communicate with the funder or plaintiffs without legal advice, and appoint specialist litigation counsel. Early action protects coverage rights and improves your strategic position. See the practical checklist above for a detailed action plan.
Yes. In funded class actions, the Federal Court conducts a settlement approval hearing to assess whether the proposed resolution is fair and reasonable for class members, including whether the funder’s commission is proportionate to the risk assumed. This judicial scrutiny adds an additional layer to the settlement process.

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Litigation Funding & Class Actions in Australia 2026, What Insurers, Businesses and Contractors Need to Know

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