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Falling Cyber Cover Uptake Sends a Warning to Beauty Operators

Why online booking, client data and digital payments now belong in your risk review

Falling Cyber Cover Uptake Sends a Warning to Beauty Operators?w=400

The information on this website is general in nature and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation, or needs. Consider seeking personal advice from a licensed adviser before acting on any information.

A new cybercrime update has put a timely spotlight on a risk that many beauty businesses still treat as secondary to slips, burns, allergic reactions or damaged equipment.
The Australian Institute of Criminology’s latest Cybercrime in Australia report, released on 30 June 2026 and covered by Insurance Business Australia, found that cyber insurance uptake has fallen even as online threats remain widespread.

The reported decline is striking because beauty businesses are becoming more digital, not less. A salon may rely on online bookings, automated reminders, point-of-sale systems, cloud client notes, loyalty databases, treatment photos, social media messages and supplier portals. A mobile beautician may run almost every administrative task through a phone or tablet. If those systems are locked, copied, misused or impersonated, the disruption can quickly become commercial rather than merely technical.

The report noted that cyber insurance ownership among surveyed Australians fell from 4.6 per cent in 2024 to 3.7 per cent in 2025. It also found that 45.5 per cent of respondents had experienced at least one measured cybercrime type in the previous 12 months, while small and medium enterprise owners, operators and managers were identified as being at higher risk across cybercrime categories. For beauty operators, that should prompt a practical question: if a scam, malware incident or identity misuse event affected your client records or booking flow tomorrow, what would keep income moving?

This story extends the recent message we have shared on cyber risk in the beauty sector: cyber cover is no longer a niche consideration for large organisations. It may sit alongside public liability, professional indemnity, property, theft, equipment and business interruption discussions when reviewing business insurance for beauticians.

Salon owners and independent therapists can respond without overcomplicating the issue. A sensible first step is to list the systems that hold client information, take payments, store passwords or support appointments. Then check whether multi-factor authentication is active, whether staff use shared passwords, whether backups are tested, and whether client data is retained longer than needed.

Insurance should be reviewed with the same discipline. Not every business pack automatically includes meaningful cyber protection, and not every cyber policy responds in the same way to scams, ransomware, privacy breaches, system restoration, lost income or crisis support. Speaking with an insurance broker or adviser may be able to assist in clarifying where some gaps sit.

For beauty professionals, the takeaway is simple: cyber risk now touches reputation, bookings, cash flow and client trust. Ignoring it because the business is small may be exactly the assumption criminals rely on.

Published:Wednesday, 8th Jul 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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