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November 2, 2016 2 min read

5 Reasons Your Travel Insurer Won't Pay Up

Travel insurers have a lot of fine print in their policies. Discover 5 common reasons why they will refuse to pay and how to make sure you’re not caught out.

Travel insurers promise the world: 24-hour help lines, immediate evacuation if you need urgent surgery, replacement money and travel documents in the blink of an eye. Then in the fine-print they tell you about all the circumstances in which they won’t pay up and the things that will void your insurance. That’s the part to read carefully.

5 reasons why your travel insurer won’t pay up

  1. Being too drunk or drugged up
    Don’t expect your insurer to pay a claim if you broke your leg skiing down the Alps after having several schnapps at the hilltop lodge. Likewise, the insurer won’t pay if it turns out you were high before you suffered an accident.

Typically, an insurer will consider you to have been under the influence if you broke the legal blood alcohol limit of the country you were travelling in, although some providers could be even stricter with their guidelines.

Alternatively, rather than completely ruling out a risky activity some insurers may set a limit on what you could be covered for. For instance, some may provide cover if you jumped out of a plane that was below a certain height above the ground.


What you should do

Check the small print and choose your policy carefully

Before you purchase any policy, thoroughly read each insurer’s product disclosure statement to see if their exclusions are likely to apply to your adventure plans.

If reading the document leaves you in a state of more confusion, get a straight answer by speaking with someone from the insurance company; explain to them what you’ll be doing abroad and ask if they would exclude you under any relevant circumstances.


Insure yourself

Don’t labour under the misapprehension that you must always have travel insurance whenever you go for a trip. Instead, weigh up the cost of something going wrong and the chances of it happening against the cost of the policy. In really simple terms, if it costs $100 dollars to replace your camera and there’s a 1 in 10 chance of you losing it, you wouldn’t be willing to pay a premium of more than $10 to insure it.

If you act smart when on holiday, you can radically reduce the chances of having to make a claim at all (and therefore the need for any insurance).

Read up in a decent guide book about your destination so that you know about local dangers, risky areas, what foods to avoid, what vaccinations to have before you go, whether or not you should drink the tap water and have ice in your drink, where pickpockets hang out, etc.

And be smart when you’re away. Always look behind you to check that you haven’t left behind your belongings when you get off a train, plane or taxi or stand up to leave a restaurant or bar. Keep away from or guard yourself against health threats like dirty water, mosquitos, contaminated food, altitude sickness, disenfranchised crocodiles, etc, etc. Stow your cash and cards safely and out of sight. Be aware of the people around you and whether they may harbor unsavoury intentions.

In other words, apply lots of common sense to minimise the often minimal risks you face when travelling. If you think you can, you might decide to forego travel insurance entirely, and over a lifetime that means many thousands of dollars you can save in premiums and spend on your next trip.

Source:  Your Mortgage Magazine

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