Queensland Storms October 2025 – Hail, Power Outages & Business Insurance Essentials
Extensive hail, lightning and power outages hit south-east Queensland in October 2025. Discover the damage, key stats and why robust business insurance is vital in today’s climate.
It was a late-October day, the skies didn’t just darken, they unleashed one of the most volatile episodes of weather in recent memory across south-east Queensland. The region confronted giant hailstones, supercell lightning, fierce wind gusts, and widespread power outages. For business owners, property managers and insurers alike, this event underscores a critical point: when force majeure strikes, it often hits your bottom line.
The recent South East Queensland storms, their scale, the damage caused by hail and lightning, and the widespread impact of power outages, and why appropriate business insurance cover is increasingly non-negotiable in an era of escalating extreme weather.
The Storms in Review
Over the weekend of 25-27 October 2025, south-east Queensland was battered by severe thunderstorms. According to reporting from the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM), multiple storm cells, some classifiable as supercells, tracked across the region, including around the Southern Downs, Ipswich, Logan, and the Sunshine Coast hinterland. ABC+1
Key features of the event included:
- Giant hailstones: In the town of Pratten (Southern Downs), hail up to 9 cm in diameter was reported. 9News+1
- Intense lightning: In one system, more than 250,000 lightning strikes were recorded across the south-east during the peak of the storm. ABC+1
- High-wind gusts and power impact: Wind gusts in some regions exceeded 100 km/h, bringing down trees, power lines, and causing outages to tens of thousands of homes.
- Widespread property damage: Reports detail smashed windows, pitted roofs, dented vehicles, and fallen trees, disrupting roads and access. ABC+1
Why the Damage Was So Severe
Two key meteorological factors amplify the destruction potential in events like this: the size of hailstones and the dynamics of supercells.
Large hailstones (8-9 cm) carry substantial mass and kinetic energy. When one of these strikes a roof, skylight, or vehicle, the damage is immediate and dramatic: shattered glass, punctured metal, and damage to the roof membrane. The event recorded hail of this scale, signalling the intensity of the storm. 9News+1
Supercell thunderstorms are among the most dangerous convective systems. They are characterised by a deep, persistent rotating up-draught, providing the capacity to generate very large hail, violent winds and significant lightning. Seeing such a system evolve over a populated corridor is exactly what happened in this case.
Combined with the vulnerability of urban infrastructure, older roofs, legacy power lines, and readily damaged vehicles, this created a perfect storm for loss.
The Human and Commercial Cost
From the data available:
- The Insurance Council of Australia (ICA) declared the Brisbane-region hailstorm a “Significant Event”, with circa 11,000 claims lodged by late October 2025. Insurance News+1
- Insurers such as Suncorp Group and Insurance Australia Group (IAG) reported thousands of claims for home, motor, and business damage in the immediate aftermath. Suncorp+1
- For power outages alone, tens of thousands of properties lost supply in south-east Queensland. For example, up to 20,000 customers were impacted in the Toowoomba/South Burnett region. ABC+1
For a business owner, this translates into potentially:
- Direct property damage (roof, windows, equipment)
- Business interruption (power outage, access blocked, staff impacts)
- Asset damage (vehicles, stock, plant & equipment)
- Increased repair and rebuild costs in a constrained trades/contractor market
Power Outages and Business Disruption
One of the less visible but highly consequential elements of this storm sequence was the power disruption. With lightning damage and fallen infrastructure, many went without power for hours or days. The cascading effect is clear: production stops, refrigeration fails, lighting and PC systems are down, and access to cloud/IT is disrupted.
Businesses located in industrial estates or reliant on continuous operational supply chains are particularly vulnerable. Too often, insurance policies focus solely on physical damage, failing to adequately cover business interruption or the knock-on effects of utility outages.
The Climate & Risk Landscape: Why This Matters
Australia’s eastern seaboard is increasingly exposed to extreme convective storms, especially under changing climatic conditions. The occurrence of large hail supercells is consistent with the patterns observed in recent years. DTN APAC+1
Equally relevant is the fact that this recent storm occurred during the onset of the wetter phase predicted for the remainder of the year under the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and its associated risk oscillator. A recent overview by Business Insurance Consulting highlights how El Niño conditions can increase the likelihood of intense storms, coastal troughs, and inland severe setups across Queensland. (see: businessinsuranceconsulting.com.au/el-nina-at-a-glance)
In short, this is not a standalone event, but rather part of a growing trend. For businesses, readiness is key.
What Businesses Should Do: From Damage to Diligence
Now is a critical moment for business owners in Queensland (and indeed across Australia) to review their insurance position and operational resilience. Here are practical steps:
- Review your policy coverage – Ensure your business insurance covers not just physical damage, but also business interruption triggered by power outages or access disruptions.
- Document pre-loss condition – Photographs of roofs, vehicles, plant and equipment, landscaping, etc, will help expedite claims.
- Check your deductible & excess – For extreme weather events, the cost of small damage may exceed thresholds and result in no payout.
- Consider additional endorsements – Given the risk of hail and lightning, policies may offer optional coverage for solar panels, roof membranes, and outbuildings.
- Business continuity plan – Map your critical operations that may be halted under power loss or structural damage; consider backup power and alternative sites.
- Proactive risk mitigation – Regular roof inspections, tree maintenance near power lines, vehicle parking under cover, and lightning protection for key assets.
- Lodge claims early – Insurers reported high volumes of claims already from this event, meaning the earlier you lodge and provide full information, the quicker you can secure repair teams. Suncorp+1
Case Study Snapshot
In one rural community west of Brisbane, hailstones up to 9 cm were reported, smashing car windscreens and puncturing roofing. 9News+1 A local insurer noted that within 24 hours, their property and motor-asset claim numbers for that area tripled compared with normal. In an industrial estate in Ipswich, vehicles stored outdoors had extensive door and bonnet dents, while office buildings suffered roofing damage and required temporary relocation of staff. This is a clear instance where the cost to repair was compounded by business interruption and rental of temporary space.
Why Business Insurance Is Non-Negotiable Now
When weather systems escalate in size and intensity, as they did this weekend in Queensland, the cost of under-insurance becomes more than just lost profit. It becomes an existential risk. A single event can ground production, degrade key assets and expose gaps in cover. With insurers already classifying the recent storm as a significant event (ICA) and claims volumes mounting, the message is clear: review your policy now, rather than discover it falls short when it matters.
Furthermore, insurers themselves are adjusting their risk appetite. As extreme weather events cluster and become more frequent, policy terms, excesses and eligibility criteria are changing. Business owners risk surprise exclusions or rising premiums unless they actively engage.
Take-Away for Business Owners
- Don’t assume “it won’t happen to me” — The regions struck this time (Southern Downs, Ipswich, Logan, Sunshine Coast hinterland) are not remote; they carry farms, industrial estates, and SMEs.
- Use the recent event as a wake-up call — If the roof over your operations, or the vehicles parked outside, or the power supply your business relies on haven’t been reviewed this year, you’re at risk.
- Internal audits and external advice — Consider engaging your broker or business insurance adviser to review your coverage in light of the recent storms and updated risk profile.
- Communicate with your insurer — Ensure you understand how your policy defines “severe storm”, “hail”, “storm surge”, “utilities failure”. The claims from this event are already moving fast.
The late-October storms in Queensland delivered a sharp reminder of the volatile nature of our climate and the far-reaching consequences when assets and operations are exposed. With giant hailstones, powerful lightning strikes and extensive power outages, the commercial impact has already been significant.
For business owners across Queensland, now is not the time to procrastinate. Business insurance must be treated as a strategic asset rather than a box-ticking exercise. Review your exposures, check your cover, and ensure your continuity planning is robust. In a world where the next storm is not a question of “if”, but “when”, preparedness is the difference between a claim-adjusting event and a business-stopping catastrophe. For further guidance on how El Niño/La Niña cycles influence severe weather risk in Australia and how that translates into insurance strategy, explore the insights available from Business Insurance Consulting.

