Nib Holdings Sells Last Travel Insurance Unit to Allianz for Up to $50M

By Josua Ferreira -

nib concludes travel insurance exit with Allianz Partners deal

nib Holdings (ASX: NHF) has entered into an agreement to sell its Australian and New Zealand travel insurance businesses to Allianz Partners (AP), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Allianz Group, for up to $50 million AUD. The sale covers the partnerships, white label channel and Travel Insurance Direct (TID), with World Nomads excluded from this transaction.

The sale price comprises approximately $30 million AUD receivable at completion and a further $20 million AUD subject to conditions being met over the first 12 months following completion. This agreement concludes the strategic review of nib’s travel insurance portfolio announced in May 2025, which covered three brands: World Nomads, TID and nib Travel.

The earlier leg of the review was resolved in February 2026, when nib announced the sale of World Nomads to International Medical Group, a wholly-owned subsidiary of SiriusPoint, for $67.5 million AUD in cash. That transaction remains on track to complete during 2026. Completion of the AP transaction is subject to regulatory approval and is also expected by end of 2026.

What the Allianz Partners deal means for nib investors

The deal structure in detail

The two transactions together represent the full exit from nib’s travel insurance operations. The table below summarises each transaction side by side.

Transaction Counterparty Assets Sold Sale Price Status
World Nomads SiriusPoint (International Medical Group) World Nomads brand $67.5M AUD cash On track to complete 2026
AU/NZ Travel Allianz Partners TID, partnerships, white label channel Up to $50M AUD ($30M at completion + $20M earnout over 12 months) Subject to regulatory approval, expected end 2026

The ongoing distribution partnership

Alongside the sale, nib and AP have entered into a long-term strategic partnership for AP to distribute nib-branded travel insurance products to nib’s customers across Australia and New Zealand. This arrangement is separate from and in addition to the $50M sale consideration.

Under the agreement, nib will receive ongoing upfront commissions for the distribution of travel insurance products through its channels. These commissions are explicitly not included in the sale price and sit on top of both the base and earnout consideration. The practical effect for nib is that it retains a customer-facing travel insurance presence without carrying the operational costs and capital requirements of running the underlying business itself.

Understanding portfolio divestiture and capital strategy

A strategic review involves a company assessing whether each of its business units genuinely aligns with its core strategy and long-term competitive strengths. Where a unit is identified as non-core, divesting it can free up capital, management attention and operational resources to be redeployed into higher-returning areas of the business.

In nib’s case, the travel insurance segment was relatively modest in scale. In FY25, nib Travel accounted for $6.7 million of nib’s total Group underlying operating profit (UOP) of $239.2 million, representing approximately 2.8% of group-level earnings. UOP is nib’s preferred measure of operational profitability, stripping out investment income and other non-operating items.

Divesting a segment of this size can be value-accretive when the proceeds are redeployed into businesses generating stronger returns. nib has confirmed it will undertake a capital management review to determine the most effective use of proceeds from both transactions. The sale consideration across both the SiriusPoint and AP transactions is expected to be materially in line with the carrying value of the assets at completion, meaning no material write-down is anticipated.

Ed Close, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, nib Group

“This transition simplifies our portfolio and allows us to focus our capital and capability where we see the strongest long-term value.”

Strategic focus on health and what comes next

With both travel insurance transactions now either announced or completed, nib’s portfolio is positioned squarely around its core health insurance and broader health services strategy. The long-term distribution agreement with AP ensures nib’s customers retain access to travel insurance products under the nib brand, without the group needing to maintain the operational infrastructure behind them.

Key milestones and next steps for investors to monitor include:

  • Regulatory approval process for the AP transaction, with completion expected by end of 2026
  • World Nomads/SiriusPoint transaction on track to complete during 2026
  • Capital management review to determine use of combined transaction proceeds
  • Transition arrangements in place with AP to ensure continuity of service for customers, travellers and nib partners throughout the handover period

Across both transactions, combined headline proceeds of up to $117.5 million AUD are available to nib, subject to earnout conditions being met. This gives the group meaningful capital flexibility heading into FY27, with the outcome of the capital management review likely to be a closely watched development for shareholders.

nib is being advised by Jarden and Ashurst on the AP transaction.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is nib Holdings selling to Allianz Partners?

nib Holdings is selling its Australian and New Zealand travel insurance businesses — including Travel Insurance Direct (TID), its partnerships channel, and its white label channel — to Allianz Partners, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Allianz Group, for up to $50 million AUD.

How much will nib receive from the Allianz Partners travel insurance deal?

nib will receive approximately $30 million AUD at completion, with a further $20 million AUD subject to conditions being met over the 12 months following completion, for a total of up to $50 million AUD from the Allianz Partners transaction alone.

What happens to nib's travel insurance products after the sale?

nib and Allianz Partners have entered into a long-term strategic distribution partnership under which AP will distribute nib-branded travel insurance products to nib's customers in Australia and New Zealand, allowing nib to retain a customer-facing presence without running the underlying business.

What are the combined proceeds from nib's full travel insurance exit?

Across both the Allianz Partners deal (up to $50 million AUD) and the earlier World Nomads sale to SiriusPoint's International Medical Group ($67.5 million AUD cash), nib's combined headline proceeds from exiting travel insurance total up to $117.5 million AUD.

Why did nib decide to exit its travel insurance business?

The travel insurance segment represented only approximately 2.8% of nib's total group underlying operating profit in FY25 ($6.7 million of $239.2 million total), and the strategic review concluded that divesting these non-core assets would free up capital and management focus for nib's core health insurance and health services operations.

Josua Ferreira
By Josua Ferreira
Partnership Director
Josua Ferreira holds a Bachelor of Commerce in Marketing and Advertising and brings a background in publication, business development, and ASX market storytelling. He has worked with listed companies across the resource sector and broader market, combining sharp commercial instincts with a genuine commitment to keeping investors informed.
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