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CTP Death Claims in NSW: Funeral Expenses and Compensation

If a person dies because of a NSW motor accident, the CTP claim usually splits into separate pathways: reasonable funeral expenses, possible Compensation to Relatives damages for financial dependency or domestic services, and, in some families, a separate psychiatric injury or nervous shock claim. Funeral expenses can usually be considered through the statutory benefits pathway, while dependency damages depend on fault, relationship, financial evidence, and causation. This page gives general NSW information only and should not be treated as advice on any family’s entitlement or limitation date.

Quick answer

If a person dies because of a NSW motor accident, the CTP claim usually splits into separate pathways: reasonable funeral expenses, possible Compensation to Relatives damages for financial dependency or domestic services, and, in some families, a separate psychiatric injury or nervous shock claim. Funeral expenses can usually be considered through the statutory benefits pathway, while dependency damages depend on fault, relationship, financial evidence, and causation. This page gives general NSW information only and should not be treated as advice on any family’s entitlement or limitation date.

Why this guide is structured this way

This page is written to help NSW CTP claimants understand deadlines, evidence, insurer decisions, and dispute pathways in plain language without overstating outcomes.

General information only. Your position depends on your facts, evidence, insurer response, and applicable time limits.

Official legal frame and public sources

These links are not a substitute for advice, but they are the main public-source anchors behind many NSW CTP questions on this page.

Top questions answered

  • What funeral expenses are covered by NSW CTP?

    In NSW, the CTP scheme covers reasonable funeral and burial or cremation expenses for a person who dies in a motor accident, regardless of who was at fault.

  • How do I claim for funeral expenses?

    You should contact the CTP insurer of the at-fault vehicle (or the Nominal Defendant if unidentified). A specific claim form for funeral expenses is usually required, along with invoices or receipts.

  • Can relatives claim for their own loss?

    Yes. If the deceased person was not at fault (or only partially at fault), eligible relatives may be able to make a "Compensation to Relatives" claim for financial dependency and other losses. These claims depend on liability and negligence.

Related topics

Funeral and burial or cremation expenses

Under Motor Accident Injuries Act 2017 (NSW) s 3.4, statutory benefits are payable for reasonable funeral expenses where death results from a motor accident in NSW.

  • Regardless of Fault: Section 3.4 is a statutory-benefits pathway, so funeral expenses are generally payable regardless of fault (subject to statutory requirements and evidence).
  • Who can claim: Section 3.4 allows payment to the deceased person’s estate or to a person who has paid/ is liable for the funeral expense.
  • Evidence: The insurer will usually require death certificate details, police event information, and tax invoices/receipts from the funeral provider.

Primary source: Motor Accident Injuries Act 2017 (NSW) s 3.4.

Compensation to Relatives claims for dependency loss

While funeral expenses are "no-fault", a claim for broader compensation (known as a Compensation to Relatives claim) depends on liability. If the accident was caused by the fault of another driver, eligible surviving relatives may claim for:

  • Financial Dependency: Compensation for the loss of financial support the deceased would have provided to their family.
  • Loss of Domestic Services: Compensation for the value of domestic chores, childcare, and home maintenance previously performed by the deceased.

These claims are evidence-heavy. Families usually need to prove both the relationship and the practical loss, not just the fact of death. Useful records can include marriage or birth certificates, tax returns, payslips, Centrelink or superannuation documents, bank statements, mortgage or rent records, childcare arrangements, and a clear description of the deceased person’s household role.

Read more: Guide to Compensation to Relatives claims.

Psychiatric injury and nervous shock claims

Close relatives who suffer a recognised psychiatric illness, such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or major depressive disorder, as a result of the death may also be eligible for a separate "nervous shock" claim. This pathway focuses on the relative's own psychological trauma and functional impact rather than the deceased's financial contribution.

A grief reaction by itself may not be enough. The claim usually needs treating records, a diagnosis from an appropriate clinician, a timeline connecting the accident and symptoms, and evidence about work capacity, care needs, treatment, and daily functioning.

Read more: Psychiatric injury after a fatal accident.

Who to notify and what to ask the insurer for

The first practical task is to identify the correct CTP insurer. If the vehicle is unidentified or uninsured, the Nominal Defendant pathway may need to be considered. When contacting the insurer, ask for the correct funeral expense claim requirements, the claim number, the person handling the file, and written confirmation of any internal review or document deadline.

Families should avoid relying only on phone calls. Keep copies of emails, upload receipts, decision letters, and insurer requests. If liability is disputed, ask the insurer to identify the exact factual or legal issue, such as fault, causation, vehicle identification, or whether the expense is considered reasonable.

Related guides: Nominal Defendant claims, unidentified vehicle CTP claims, and identifying the correct insurer.

Time limits and review deadlines need early checking

Death claims are subject to strict legal timeframes. Funeral expenses should be claimed as soon as practical. A formal Compensation to Relatives damages claim is usually subject to a 3-year limitation period from date of death, but statutory benefit notifications often have much shorter windows, including notification periods that can arise well before a damages limitation date. Always check the legislation, the claim form, and any insurer decision letter for the exact deadline that applies to the issue in dispute.

If an insurer decision has already been made, the review deadline may be much shorter than the overall claim limitation period. A cautious family should calendar the deadline, lodge a rights-preserving response if necessary, and then add fuller financial, medical, or expert evidence as soon as possible.

Primary source for who may claim dependency damages: Compensation to Relatives Act 1897 (NSW) s 4.

Build one evidence pack with separate tabs

Most delay in death matters comes from insurers saying the file is “unclear” rather than saying it is outright ineligible. A practical fix is to lodge one indexed bundle with clear tabs:

  • Tab A — Funeral expenses: provider invoices, receipts, payment proof, and any unavoidable add-on costs.
  • Tab B — Dependency loss: household income history, spending records, dependency narrative, and domestic-services evidence.
  • Tab C — Psychiatric injury (if relevant): treating records, diagnosis timeline, and functional-impact evidence for the relative claimant.

Add a one-page cover note that states exactly what decision you want on each tab. This reduces “global” refusals where one disputed issue is used to stall everything else.

If the insurer disputes the claim

Common disputes include whether the death resulted from the motor accident, whether another driver was at fault, whether the claimed funeral expense is reasonable, who is an eligible relative, and how dependency or domestic services should be valued. The correct pathway may involve internal review, the Personal Injury Commission (PIC), medical evidence, or court advice depending on the decision type.

Before escalating, separate the issue into liability, entitlement, and amount. A liability dispute needs accident evidence. An entitlement dispute needs relationship and statutory evidence. A quantum dispute needs receipts, financial records, actuarial or accounting material where appropriate, and practical evidence of household services.

See also Personal Injury Commission disputes and internal review in NSW CTP claims.

Frequently asked questions

What funeral expenses are covered by NSW CTP?
In NSW, the CTP scheme covers reasonable funeral and burial or cremation expenses for a person who dies in a motor accident, regardless of who was at fault.
How do I claim for funeral expenses?
You should contact the CTP insurer of the at-fault vehicle (or the Nominal Defendant if unidentified). A specific claim form for funeral expenses is usually required, along with invoices or receipts.
Can relatives claim for their own loss?
Yes. If the deceased person was not at fault (or only partially at fault), eligible relatives may be able to make a "Compensation to Relatives" claim for financial dependency and other losses. These claims depend on liability and negligence.
Is a CTP death claim the same as a nervous shock claim?
No. A death claim usually deals with funeral expenses and, where another driver was at fault, dependency or domestic-services loss for eligible relatives. A nervous shock claim is the relative’s own psychiatric injury claim and needs separate medical evidence of a recognised psychiatric illness.
What evidence helps a dependency claim after a fatal accident?
Useful evidence often includes relationship documents, income records, tax returns, bank statements, household expense records, childcare or domestic-services evidence, and a short chronology explaining how the deceased supported the family before the accident.
What should we do if the review deadline is under 7 days?
Lodge a rights-preserving submission immediately with the decision letter, deadline date, and your core evidence set (death record, funeral invoices, dependency snapshot). Clearly state that supplementary material will follow. This protects time limits while you finalise expert and financial evidence.