APRA governance reform entered a new phase on 16 June 2026, when Australia’s prudential regulator launched the final stage of its cross-industry governance review — tightening board accountability standards while simultaneously cutting the reporting overhead that has weighed on insurer compliance teams for years. The package combines a rewritten draft CPS 510 with coordinated Financial Accountability Regime (FAR) relief, and boards that act early will be better placed when the new requirements take effect from early 2028.
Draft CPS 510 and the Consultation Clock
APRA’s governance review targets nothing less than the foundational board-conduct framework that banks, insurers and superannuation funds have operated under for more than a decade. The regulator is now inviting written submissions on draft CPS 510, covering revised board composition and independence requirements, alongside proposed definitional changes in CPS 001 Defined Terms that cut across all prudential standards. Consultation runs until the end of August 2026, a compressed window that gives compliance teams roughly ten weeks to review, model impacts and submit feedback.
The parallel removal of routine fit-and-proper reporting carries immediate operational weight. Under current rules, regulated entities must submit individual assessments for a wide population of responsible persons; APRA’s proposal would eliminate that obligation for 6,000 individuals across the industry. For a mid-size general insurer with dozens of nominated officers, that represents a meaningful reduction in annual compliance throughput — though the underlying fitness-and-propriety standard itself remains intact.
Feedback gathered during consultation will shape the final standard and related guidance, planned for release in late 2026. APRA has signalled it will also hold stakeholder meetings alongside the written process, giving insurer trade bodies and large groups a forum to raise sector-specific concerns before the standard is locked in.
FAR Streamlining: The Numbers Behind the Relief
Running in parallel, APRA and ASIC announced FAR changes aimed at cutting administrative burden across the financial sector. Three structural changes define the package: removing key-functions requirements from the FAR regulator rules, raising the materiality threshold for notifying regulators of accountability changes, and dropping direct-report information from accountability maps — collectively affecting 4,500 accountable people.
The accountability-map reform alone has significant operational value. Changes to accountability maps will at least halve the number of updates entities need to make — a meaningful saving for groups that currently maintain complex, frequently revised maps spanning multiple regulated subsidiaries. For insurers operating across life, general and health lines under the same holding structure, the reduction in map-maintenance cycles translates directly into legal and governance team hours.
AFS licensees also benefit from eased competence-evidence requirements: approximately 2,000 current Australian financial services licensees will see streamlined responsible-manager competence obligations. The earliest relief lands quickly: reduced requirements to submit evidence of competence apply from October 2026, giving affected licensees a concrete near-term compliance win well before the broader CPS 510 changes kick in.
The “Strengthen and Streamline” Paradox
The simultaneous tightening of board governance standards and loosening of transactional reporting obligations reflects a regulatory philosophy that has gained traction across jurisdictions: concentrate scrutiny where systemic risk is highest, and strip out process overhead where it adds friction without adding safety. APRA Member Therese McCarthy Hockey framed the balance directly, saying the changes “get the balance right, allow entities to get on with running their businesses, and reinforce APRA’s commitment to proportionality.” ASIC Commissioner Kate O’Rourke added that the reforms “reduce regulatory burden while maintaining consumer protections.”
For insurers, the paradox has a practical edge. Draft CPS 510 is expected to sharpen expectations around board independence and skills matrices — areas where APRA has signalled dissatisfaction in recent thematic reviews, including its push for insurer readiness to geopolitical shocks and its call for a step change in AI risk governance. Boards that have treated governance standards as a checklist exercise — rather than a genuine risk-management discipline — face the greater adjustment. By contrast, the FAR relief primarily benefits operations and compliance functions already managing well-structured accountability frameworks.
The contrast with enforcement action elsewhere sharpens the context. APRA’s willingness to act on governance failures is not hypothetical: APRA revoked Eric Insurance’s licence earlier this year, a reminder that streamlined reporting does not mean reduced regulatory appetite for substantive breaches.
What Boards, CROs and Compliance Teams Should Do Now
The consultation period through end of August 2026 is the primary action window. Insurers with material concerns — around director independence thresholds, skills-matrix definitions or the practical removal of fit-and-proper filings — should prepare formal submissions rather than relying on industry associations to carry their positions alone. APRA has indicated it will weigh individual entity feedback alongside peak-body responses.
For CROs, the accountability-map reforms warrant an immediate mapping audit. If current maps include direct-report data and key-functions annotations that will no longer be required, stripping them out before the changes become mandatory reduces both maintenance burden and the risk of maintaining two parallel versions across the transition period.
Compliance teams managing AFS licensee obligations should calendar October 2026 as the competence-evidence relief date and begin preparing revised responsible-manager files now, so the transition is procedural rather than reactive. The final CPS 510 standard in late 2026 will then set the board-level requirements that need to be embedded into 2027 planning cycles — leaving a workable runway before the 2028 effective date.