Legal updates and opinions
News / News
Exemptions for certain short-term insurers providing premium relief
by Hilah Laskov, Senior Associate and Chelsea Roux, Candidate Attorney
Reviewed by Shayne Krige, Director and head of the Investment Funds & Private Equity practice
The FSCA has allowed insurers to provide premium relief to policyholders who may be unable to pay their insurance policies due to the financial pressures caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The FSCA has issued additional exemptions from the Regulations dealing with the payment of commissions for short-term insurers providing such premium relief.
- Background
On 17 April 2020, we advised that a number of insurers had approached the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (the “FSCA“) to request permission to grant premium relief to policyholders who may be unable to meet their insurance policy obligations due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[1]
The FSCA, in a notice[2] (the “First Notice“) published on 15 April 2020, responded to these requests by allowing insurers and independent intermediaries to make use of premium relief[3] and by providing an exemption to insurers who grant such premium relief (“Entities Providing Premium Relief“) from, amongst others, the requirement under the Regulations under the Short-Term Insurance Act[4] (the “Regulations“) that commission may only be paid once the premium is paid to the insurer[5] (the “First Exemption“). The First Exemption was made subject to certain conditions.
- Exemption for short-term insurers and independent intermediaries
On 23 April 2020, the FSCA published a notice[6] (the “Second Notice“) which withdrew and replaced the First Notice.
The Second Notice provides that Entities Providing Premium Relief are exempt from compliance with the requirement under the Regulations that commission may only be paid once the premium is paid to an insurer[7], as was the case with the First Notice, and goes further to provide that Entities Providing Premium Relief are also exempt from the requirement that any commission paid in respect of the policy must not exceed the maximum allowable commission[8] (the “Second Exemption“).
The Second Exemption is subject to the conditions that:
2.1 the premium relief is granted in relation to an existing policy[9] of which the policyholder is in good standing with the insurer; and
2.2 any commission paid in respect of the policy subject to the premium relief must not exceed the prescribed maximum allowable commission, whereas a reference to “premium” in the Regulations[10] must be read as the premium that would have been payable had it not been for the premium relief.
- Commencement and duration
The Second Notice is effective as of 23 April 2020 and will remain effective until amendment or withdrawal by the FSCA by notice on its website.
- Breach of the notice
Non‑compliance with the conditions
provided in the Second Notice will result in the exemptions no longer being
applicable to that short-term insurer.
[1] See Financial Services Sector Update 6 sent on 17 April 2020.
[2] The exemption was granted in FSCA INS Notice 6 of 2020 published on 15 April 2020.
[3] “Premium relief” means a temporary release from the obligation to pay the premium payable under an existing policy in whole or in part, either by –
(a) allowing the non-payment of premium for a limited amount of time;
(b) allowing for an extended period of grace for the payment of premium; or
without reducing or limiting any policy benefits under the policy.
[4] GNR.1493 of 27 November 1998: Regulations under section 70 of the Short-term Insurance Act 53 1998 (Government Gazette No. 19495) (“Regulations“).
[5] Regulation 5.2 of the Regulations.
[6] FSCA INS Notice 8 of 2020.
[7] Regulation 5.2 of the Regulations.
[8] Regulation 5.3(1) of the Regulations.
[9] “Existing policy”, as defined in the Notice, means a policy entered into before the date on which the Notice is published.
[10] Regulation 5.3(1) of the Regulations.
Latest News
The Clock is Ticking on Unfair Labour Practice Referrals – Labour Court Confirms They Are One-Time Events
by Bradley Workman-Davies, Director In the recent case of NEHAWU obo Makhubele & others v Ramalatso NO & others , the Labour [...]
Troubled waters and looming distress as we enter the second half of 2025
by Brendan Olivier, Director Much has been written and said about the dangers posed to South Africa’s economy, by outside [...]
No! It is NOT all about consent!
by Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Director & Head of Regulatory “I believe that a guarantee of public access to government information is [...]
When a Withdrawal Doesn’t Really Withdraw: Provisional Liquidation is not Set Aside by Withdrawal
by Walid Brown, Director and Nombulelo Bashe, Associate Introduction We were recently reprimanded by an opponent for having the temerity [...]
AI-Hallucinated Case Law
Appellate court to trial judge: You know these cases are made up, right? by Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Director and Head of [...]
AI and the Data Privacy Elephant in the Room
“The real problem is not whether machines think, but whether men do.” – B.F. Skinner by Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Director and Head of [...]