Travel Insurance articles
More travelers are buying coverage for mishaps or
canceled vacations. Policies can be useful but complex. - by Jane Engle from
Travel Insider
The recent hurricanes in the Caribbean and the U.S.
and terrorist attacks on London's transit system have prompted travelers to
scrutinize trip insurance policies, a subject of some confusion since the Sept.
11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the U.S.
"We got swamped with telephone calls after the
London bombings," said Beth Godlin, senior vice president of travel markets for
Access America, a large insurance company with offices in Richmond, Va. "Most
people wanted to know what benefits they had."
For some in this situation, the answers are
reassuring; for others, disappointing. It usually hinges on the fine print.
Millions of American leisure travelers buy
insurance — about 30%, an increase from 10% before the Sept. 11 attacks, the
United States Travel Insurance Assn., a Washington, D.C., trade group estimated
in May.
Some buy policies online or through travel agents;
others through a tour operator or cruise line. Now some airlines sell them.
Those policies are complex products. Travel
insurance may cover medical care, baggage loss, unused parts of interrupted
trips or nonrefundable deposits on trips that get canceled — or all of these
situations. A certificate of insurance for package policies, which combine
several types of coverage, may fill 15 or more pages, with dozens of
definitions, exclusions and caveats.
But travel insurance can be worth buying, and,
fortunately, the industry cleaves to some standard, if not universal, practices.
Package policies are popular. Premiums for these
generally are 4% to 8% of the trip's price, depending on your age and what is
covered. Such policies usually include:
• Trip interruption and cancellation. This
reimburses you for losses if an emergency forces you to cancel or cut short a
trip. Covered events typically include a serious illness, a natural disaster
(including bad weather), a terrorist attack, an accident on the way to
departing, a jury summons or a labor strike.
• Medical. This pays for care during your trip or
evacuation to a medical facility or both. Designed to cover emergencies, it
usually excludes preexisting conditions. Check limits on payouts; evacuations
can cost $10,000 or more.
• Baggage loss or damage.
• Emergency assistance by phone.
Besides regular trip insurance, some cruise and
tour operators sell waivers that allow customers to cancel trips for any reason
and still recover at least part of their deposits.
For instance, Tauck World Discovery, a tour
operator based in Norwalk, Conn., sells a "guest protection plan" for $200 to
$300, depending on trip length. It allows you to cancel for any reason up to the
day of departure and get a full refund on your tour price, said spokesman Tom
Armstrong; airfare is refundable only under certain conditions.
Princess Cruises sells a "travel care" plan that
also allows cancellation for any reason. Depending on the situation and level of
coverage, you may get all your cruise deposit or fare refunded in cash or only a
part, as a credit on a future cruise. The cost is $59 to more than $300, based
on the fare price and coverage limits.
Buying travel insurance or a waiver can be
especially worthwhile if you are elderly or in delicate health or if the trip is
so expensive that you would have a hard time taking a loss on it. A $200 plane
ticket is probably not worth insuring; a $2,000 cruise or tour may be another
story.
It's just as important to know what an insurance
policy doesn't cover as what it does. Although policies vary, they often exclude
these situations:
• You're afraid to travel because of a recent
terrorist attack. Many trip interruption and cancellation policies cover
terrorism, but they are strictly limited. Typically, insurers will reimburse you
for various costs if the attack occurred while you were traveling or if you had
planned to go to a city within 30 days of an attack — providing you bought the
policy before the attack.
"The policy is city-specific," Godlin said of
Access America's terms. "If something happens in London and you want to cancel
your trip to Manchester, England, you're not covered."
Some insurers exclude terrorism coverage in a
country for six months after an incident; others don't.
• Your employer won't give you time off. Changes in
work schedules are among the most common reasons people cancel trips. But unless
you bought a cancel-for-any-reason waiver, you probably won't be covered.
If you're laid off, as opposed to fired for cause,
you may be covered, depending on how long you've worked at the same place. The
minimum can be a year or as long as five years.
• Your airline or cruise or tour company goes
bankrupt. Many policies cover this situation under "financial default"
provisions. But restrictions can be significant. Some companies may not be
covered.
Access America, for instance, maintains a list of
more than 300 companies, mostly tour operators, that it will insure for default.
Among those not on the list, as of the Travel section's Tuesday deadline, were
United Airlines and US Airways, which have been under Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection.
If you buy a waiver or insurance through an airline
or other travel supplier, it probably won't cover financial default of that
supplier. Eventually, you may be able to collect through a charge-back on your
credit card or through bonds or letters of credit that the company holds, but it
can take a while.
That's one reason it's advisable to pay for travel
on your credit card, not in cash or by check. Federal law gives cardholders
certain protections, including the right to dispute charges for goods (including
services such as travel) that are not received.
Just don't rely on your credit card for travel
insurance. Some come with services such as rental car coverage and emergency
advice by phone, but the benefits tend to be limited.
Our program must be purchased at the time of booking
|
Vacation Package Insurance |
|
If you paid per person:
|
Your premium is: |
|
000 - 500 |
$45 |
|
500 - 1000 |
$74 |
|
1001 - 1500 |
$93 |
|
1501 - 2000 |
$129 |
|
2001 - 2500 |
$164 |
|
2501 - 3000 |
$200 |
|
3001 - 3500 |
$235 |
|
3501 - 4000 |
$270 |
|
4001 - 4500 |
$305 |
|
4501 - 5000 |
$340 |
|
each 1000 more |
add $70 |
|
Coverage: |
|
|
Trip
Cancellation and Interruption |
Vacation Package Cost |
|
Travel Delay |
$500 Maximum $100 per day |
|
Baggage and Travel Documents |
$1,000 |
|
Baggage Delay |
$100 |
|
Medical Expense |
$10,000 |
|
Emergency Medical Transportation |
$20,000 |
|
Accidental Death and Dismemberment |
$25,000 |
|
Travel Guard Assistance |
Included |
|
Live
Travel |
Included |
|
Airline Ticket Insurance |
|
If you
paid per person: |
Your premium is: |
|
000 - 250 |
$23 |
|
251 - 500 |
$30 |
|
501 - 800 |
$45 |
|
801 - 1000 |
$56 |
|
1001 - 1250 |
$67 |
|
1251 - 1500 |
$85 |
|
1501 - 1750 |
$103 |
|
1751 - 2000 |
$114 |
|
2001 - 2500 |
$137 |
|
2501 - 3000 |
$168 |
|
Coverage: |
|
|
Trip
Cancellation and Interruption |
Vacation Package Cost |
|
Travel Delay |
$500-Maximum $100 daily |
|
Baggage and Travel Documents |
$500 |
|
Baggage Delay |
$100 |
|
Optional Coverage: |
|
|
$25000 collision damage waiver |
$6 per day |
|
$30000 Emergency Medical
Transportation |
$15 per insured |
| |
|
|
Notes: Pre-existing medical condition
exclusion waived if insurance is purchased within 24 hours of
initial trip payment. The insurance may be purchased no later than
their final trip payment date, without waiver of pre-existing
medical conditions. The trip cancellation and interruption coverage
will have named peril wording. |
Travel Insurance
If you purchased travel services from different
vendors, such as your airfare
directly
from the airline and your hotel from us, then protect your full
investment by purchasing:
Air only travel insurance -
Vacation & Tour insurance -
Cruise Insurance
View full description of coverage
For specific questions
regarding insurance, please call INSURE AMERICA®.
Representatives are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
TOLL-FREE: 1-888-826-1300 |