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Suing the state in Australia 2026 is becoming significantly more viable for claimants, driven by the introduction of the Civil Law (Wrongs) Amendment Bill 2026 in the ACT Legislative Assembly and parallel reforms in Victoria, Queensland and Western Australia. The Bill directly addresses longstanding barriers to claims against government and public institutions, including vicarious liability for institutional child abuse, limitation-period reform and the treatment of previously settled claims. For practitioners, in-house counsel and community legal centres, these changes demand immediate attention: limitation clocks may shift, dormant claims may be revived, and defence strategies that relied on institutional immunity are likely to narrow.
This guide provides a plain-English walkthrough of the Bill, a state-by-state comparison of the practical effects, and an actionable litigation roadmap for claimants and their lawyers.
The Civil Law (Wrongs) Amendment Bill 2026 is a legislative instrument introduced in the ACT Legislative Assembly to amend the Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002 (ACT). Its primary purpose is to reform the legal framework governing claims against government agencies, public institutions and other bodies that exercise authority over vulnerable persons, particularly in the context of institutional child abuse and historic negligence. The Bill is listed on the ACT Legislation Register and is separately catalogued on AustLII.
At its core, the Bill responds to a gap exposed by the High Court of Australia. The 2024 decision in Bird v DP held that an institution could not be held vicariously liable for the criminal acts of a person who was not, in the strict common-law sense, an employee. That decision left many abuse survivors, including those harmed in foster care, religious institutions and government-run facilities, without a viable cause of action against the institution itself. Industry observers expect the Bill to serve as a template for other jurisdictions seeking to close this gap.
The Bill was introduced in the ACT Legislative Assembly in early 2026. The explanatory statement published alongside the Bill on the ACT Legislation Register confirms that the amendments are intended to commence on a date fixed by the Minister, with a backstop commencement provision. Practitioners should monitor the ACT Legislation Register for the notification of the commencement date. Victoria, Queensland and Western Australia have each advanced their own parallel legislation, discussed further below.
The most significant practical effect of the Civil Law (Wrongs) Amendment Bill 2026 is the expansion of vicarious liability. For claimants pursuing claims against government Australia-wide, this changes the litigation calculus considerably. Rather than needing to establish a formal employment relationship between the institution and the perpetrator, the Bill introduces a statutory test that captures relationships “akin to employment”, including foster carers engaged by government agencies, volunteers in state-run programs and clergy operating under institutional authority.
This reform directly reverses the practical barrier created by Bird v DP. As one leading firm analysis explains, the High Court’s decision meant that institutions could escape liability simply because the perpetrator was technically not an employee. The Bill ensures that the substance of the relationship, the degree of control, integration and authority exercised by the institution, determines liability, not the formal contractual label.
Under the reformed framework, a claimant seeking to establish vicarious liability against a government agency or public institution will need to demonstrate several elements:
The likely practical effect will be that claimants can pursue government departments, statutory authorities and funded service providers far more readily than under the pre-2026 common-law position. Early indications suggest that plaintiffs’ firms are already reassessing previously unviable files.
One of the most consequential, and contested, provisions of the 2026 reforms concerns the power to reopen claims that were previously settled or the subject of a final judgment. The Queensland Parliament’s tabled paper on civil liability reform canvasses the policy rationale: many historic abuse settlements were entered into at a time when the law did not recognise vicarious liability for institutional abuse, meaning claimants accepted inadequate compensation under legal duress. The Bill and its cognate state legislation contemplate a court-supervised process whereby a claimant can apply to have such a settlement set aside, provided they can demonstrate that the settlement was materially affected by the pre-reform legal position.
Practitioners should note that any reopening mechanism is expected to carry strict procedural safeguards: time limits on applications, requirements for leave of the court, and consideration of prejudice to the defendant institution. The precise scope and conditions will vary by jurisdiction.
Limitation periods for civil claims in Australia 2026 are undergoing significant reform, and the state-by-state position is far from uniform. The following comparison table summarises the pre-2026 position and the practical effect of the current reforms in each jurisdiction. Practitioners should verify the operative commencement date for each state’s amendments before relying on any extended limitation window.
| Jurisdiction | Pre-2026 Limitation Position | Practical 2026 Effect (Summary) |
|---|---|---|
| ACT | Standard limitation periods under Limitation Act 1985 (ACT); no specific carve-out for institutional abuse claims. | The Civil Law (Wrongs) Amendment Bill 2026 modifies limitation treatment for abuse-related and certain negligence claims against institutions. Transitional provisions contemplate applications to extend or disapply standard periods where claims were previously time-barred. |
| NSW | Limitation Act 1969 (NSW); prior reforms removed limitation periods for child abuse claims (2016 amendments). | NSW already operates under an open limitation window for child abuse claims. The 2026 reforms primarily affect vicarious liability and the ability to reopen settled claims, practitioners should monitor for any cognate NSW Bill or practice direction. |
| VIC | Limitation of Actions Act 1958 (Vic); limitation periods for child abuse claims removed by 2015 amendments. | Victoria’s Parliament has advanced separate vicarious liability legislation for child abuse. The Parliament of Victoria’s published announcements confirm that the reforms will ensure institutions can be held vicariously liable irrespective of the formal employment status of the perpetrator. |
| QLD | Limitation of Actions Act 1974 (Qld); limitation periods for institutional abuse claims removed by 2017 amendments. | Queensland’s tabled paper on civil liability addresses the legislative response to Bird v DP and contemplates both vicarious liability reform and a mechanism to revisit previously settled claims. |
| WA | Limitation Act 2005 (WA); limitation periods for child abuse claims removed in 2018. | The WA government introduced a Bill to bolster civil claims by church victims of child sexual abuse, extending vicarious liability to non-employee perpetrators and addressing limitation treatment for reopened claims. |
| SA | Limitation of Actions Act 1936 (SA); limitation periods for child abuse claims removed by 2018 amendments. | SA practitioners should monitor for a cognate state response to the federal-level vicarious liability reforms. The 2026 position is that the limitation window for abuse claims remains open, but vicarious liability gaps may persist until state legislation catches up. |
| TAS | Limitation Act 1974 (Tas); child abuse limitation periods removed in 2018. | Tasmania has not yet tabled a specific vicarious liability Bill. Practitioners with Tasmanian claims should assess whether the ACT model legislation could inform future reform and preserve claims in the interim. |
| NT | Limitation Act 1981 (NT); limitation reform for abuse claims commenced in 2018. | NT-specific claims against government (including housing and duty-of-care claims) remain subject to standard limitation periods for non-abuse claims. Active litigation, such as the Papunya housing claim, tests the boundaries of negligence and public-duty liability. |
The Victorian and Western Australian reforms deserve particular attention. Victoria’s Parliament has published detailed materials confirming that its vicarious liability legislation for child abuse is designed to ensure victim-survivors can hold institutions liable regardless of the perpetrator’s formal employment status. Western Australia’s Bill, announced in late 2025, specifically targets church and religious institutions but is expected to have broader implications for government agencies that contracted with religious bodies for the delivery of services. Queensland’s tabled paper similarly addresses the Bird v DP gap and proposes a statutory reversal that will affect both private and public institutional defendants.
Damages for negligence in Australia 2026 continue to be governed by a patchwork of state and territory civil liability legislation. Each jurisdiction imposes its own caps on general damages (non-economic loss), thresholds for the recovery of economic loss, and rules governing the availability of exemplary or aggravated damages against public defendants. The 2026 reforms do not abolish these caps, but they may significantly increase the quantum of recoverable damages by broadening the categories of institutional defendants who can be sued, and by allowing previously time-barred or settled claims to be re-litigated at current damages levels.
In claims against government agencies, particularly those involving historic abuse or systemic negligence, damages valuation requires specialist evidence. Practitioners should engage forensic economists to model past and future economic loss (including lost earning capacity from childhood abuse), clinical psychologists and psychiatrists to quantify non-economic loss, and occupational therapists or life-care planners to prepare future care cost estimates. The Colin Biggers & Paisley 2026 Civil Liability Handbook provides a useful reference for current statutory thresholds, discount rates and heads of damage across all jurisdictions.
Industry observers expect that claimants who can present comprehensive, expert-supported damages evidence early in the proceeding will achieve materially better settlement outcomes, particularly where the defendant is a state government with reputational and political incentives to resolve claims efficiently.
Historically, claims against government in Australia have encountered a range of threshold defences. Sovereign immunity, the principle that the Crown cannot be sued without its consent, has been progressively eroded by statute across all jurisdictions. Each state and territory has enacted a Crown Proceedings Act or equivalent, which generally permits tort claims against the state subject to certain procedural requirements. The 2026 reforms further narrow the circumstances in which government defendants can invoke statutory immunity, particularly in institutional abuse cases.
Practitioners confronting an immunity defence should take several tactical steps:
Freedom of information requests and administrative review proceedings can serve a complementary role. FOI applications to the defendant agency, prior to issuing proceedings, may yield documentary evidence of systemic failures, policy breaches and internal complaints that strengthens the substantive claim. Administrative review (e.g., via the relevant state administrative tribunal) can also produce findings that establish liability in subsequent civil proceedings, although practitioners should be mindful of issue estoppel and related doctrines.
The following step-by-step checklist is designed for plaintiffs’ solicitors, community legal centres and in-house counsel preparing claims against government Australia-wide under the 2026 reform framework.
The litigation funding landscape in Australia is maturing rapidly. According to analysis by Herbert Smith Freehills and others, six key trends are shaping class actions risk in Australia in 2026, including increased funder competition, regulatory scrutiny of funding commissions, and the growing use of portfolio funding arrangements for institutional abuse claims. Practitioners acting for claimants should ensure that any funding agreement complies with the relevant court’s practice note and provides for an independent costs assessment.
In early 2026, traditional owners and former residents of Wittenoom commenced proceedings against the Western Australian government, alleging decades of negligent failure to remediate asbestos contamination at the former mining town. The case illustrates the intersection of public duty, environmental harm and government liability. It also demonstrates how limitation-period reform has enabled claims that would previously have been time-barred, as claimants argue that the government’s ongoing failure to act constitutes a continuing breach of duty.
In April 2026, residents of the remote community of Papunya filed proceedings against the Northern Territory government, alleging that the provision of unsafe, poorly maintained public housing in conditions of extreme heat constituted negligence and a breach of the government’s duty of care. As reported by ABC News, the claim raises novel questions about the scope of government liability for systemic failures in essential-service delivery to remote Indigenous communities. The likely practical effect of this litigation, regardless of the ultimate outcome, will be to establish clearer precedents for duty-of-care claims against state and territory governments in the housing and infrastructure context.
The 2026 reform cycle represents the most significant expansion of the ability to sue government and public institutions in Australia in over a decade. For anyone contemplating suing the state in Australia 2026, the following immediate actions are recommended:
This article is general information only and does not constitute legal advice. The application of the 2026 reforms to any particular claim will depend on the specific facts, jurisdiction and legislative commencement dates. Readers should seek independent legal advice from a qualified practitioner before taking any action.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Peter Obrien at OBrien Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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