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Hell or High Water Contracts: 2026 Guide for Australian Businesses

Thinking about leasing equipment or signing a major finance contract? Make sure you understand every clause—including hell or high water provisions—before you commit.

When the stakes are high, certainty is king. Hell or high water contracts—once a niche feature in Australian asset finance—are now front and centre for many businesses seeking equipment, vehicles, or even large-scale energy solutions. As we move through 2026, understanding these contracts is essential for anyone navigating Australia’s evolving finance and leasing markets.

What Is a Hell or High Water Contract?

A hell or high water (HOHW) contract is a binding agreement in which the lessee must continue to make payments to the lessor, no matter what happens. This means that, even if the leased asset is destroyed, lost, faulty, or circumstances change drastically, the lessee is still responsible for fulfilling the financial obligations. The phrase ‘hell or high water’ signals the absolute nature of the commitment.

Common in equipment leasing, infrastructure finance, and large-scale project funding, these contracts provide maximum assurance for lenders and lessors. But for businesses signing on the dotted line, the risks—and rewards—can be substantial.

For example, a mining company leasing $5 million worth of heavy equipment in the Pilbara might enter a HOHW contract. If a cyclone damages the equipment beyond repair, the lessee is still on the hook for payments—even if insurance is delayed or denied.

HOHW clauses are legally enforceable in Australia, but they’re not immune to challenge. Courts will scrutinise the fairness of the contract and whether the lessee entered the agreement with full understanding of the risks.

Recent real-world example: In early 2026, a Sydney-based solar installation company entered a HOHW lease for imported battery storage systems. When a port strike delayed delivery for six months, the company was still required to make payments—even though the batteries hadn’t arrived. The case highlighted how HOHW contracts can shift significant risk to lessees, especially when supply chains are disrupted.

Should You Sign a Hell or High Water Contract?

Signing a HOHW contract is a major commitment. Here are key questions to ask before agreeing:

For lessors and lenders, HOHW clauses make sense—especially in volatile sectors. For lessees, it’s about weighing the certainty of finance against the risk of paying for an asset you can’t use. As with any major financial decision, understanding the fine print is everything.

Conclusion

Hell or high water contracts are here to stay in Australia’s finance landscape, especially as lenders seek certainty in an unpredictable world. If you’re considering such an agreement in 2026, be proactive: scrutinise every clause, model the worst-case scenario, and negotiate where you can. The right advice and a clear-eyed approach will ensure you’re not caught out—come hell or high water.