Travel Insurance Claim Rights

Travel Insurance Claim Denied?

Fight trip cancellation denials, medical coverage gaps, and COVID disputes. 70% success rate with $500-$25K typical recoveries.

70%
Success Rate
$500-$25K
Typical Recovery
30 Days
Claim Window
60-180 Days
Pre-existing Lookback

Check Your Travel Claim Eligibility

Answer a few questions to see if you can dispute your travel insurance claim denial.

Start Your Travel Claim Review

Tell us about your travel insurance claim

Our AI will analyze your description and guide you through the next steps

Common Travel Insurance Claim Issues

Know your rights when insurers deny, delay, or devalue your travel claim

Trip Cancellation Denials

Insurer denies cancellation claim citing exclusions, insufficient documentation, or claiming your reason doesn't qualify as "covered event."

Common denials: "Not medically necessary," "pre-existing condition," "foreseeability"
Often reversible with doctor's certification and policy review

Pre-Existing Condition Exclusions

Insurer denies claim alleging condition existed during lookback period (typically 60-180 days before purchase), even for undiagnosed or stable conditions.

Lookback periods: 60, 90, 120, or 180 days depending on policy
Pre-existing waiver available if purchased within 14-21 days of initial deposit

COVID-19 Coverage Disputes

Insurer denies COVID-related cancellation, medical, or quarantine claims citing pandemic exclusions or timing issues.

Pandemic exclusions became common after 2020; check purchase date
Many policies now offer COVID coverage if purchased within 14-21 days

Medical Emergency Abroad

Insurer denies or underpays emergency medical treatment abroad, questioning medical necessity or claiming treatment was elective.

Typical limits: $50K-$500K for medical, $100K-$1M for evacuation
Must prove emergency nature with foreign doctor's documentation

Cancel For Any Reason (CFAR)

Insurer disputes CFAR claim citing timing requirements (must cancel 48+ hours before departure) or offering less than expected reimbursement percentage.

CFAR typically covers only 50-75% of trip cost, not 100%
Must be purchased within 14-21 days of initial trip payment

Baggage & Travel Delays

Insurer denies baggage loss/delay or travel delay claims citing insufficient delay time, missing receipts, or airline responsibility.

Typical minimums: 3-6 hour delay for baggage, 6-12 hours for travel
Keep all receipts for emergency purchases during delays

Understanding Travel Insurance Coverage

Know what your policy covers and what it doesn't

Trip Cancellation

Covered Reasons
  • • Illness/injury (you or family)
  • • Death of traveler or family
  • • Job loss (layoff)
  • • Natural disasters at destination
  • • Terrorist incident
  • • Jury duty/court subpoena
Typical Limits

100% of trip cost (up to policy max: $10K-$100K)

Medical Coverage

What's Covered
  • • Emergency medical treatment
  • • Hospital stays abroad
  • • Emergency dental (limited)
  • • Prescriptions
  • • Medical evacuation
  • • Repatriation of remains
Typical Limits

Medical: $25K-$500K
Evacuation: $100K-$1M

Cancel For Any Reason

Requirements
  • • Purchase within 14-21 days of initial deposit
  • • Cancel 48+ hours before departure
  • • Insure 100% of trip cost
  • • Pay premium (20-40% higher)
Reimbursement

50-75% of trip cost (varies by provider)

Common Exclusions (Usually NOT Covered)

  • • Pre-existing conditions (without waiver)
  • • Known/foreseeable events at purchase
  • • Change of mind (without CFAR)
  • • Financial default of travel supplier (without CFR rider)
  • • War, civil unrest
  • • Intoxication, illegal activities
  • • High-risk activities (unless covered by rider)
  • • Mental health conditions (most policies)

How to Dispute Your Travel Insurance Claim

Follow these steps to challenge a denial or underpayment

1

Request Complete Denial Letter

Insurer must provide written denial with specific reasons citing policy sections. If you received vague denial, request detailed explanation in writing.

What the Denial Letter Must Include:

  • • Specific policy sections/exclusions cited
  • • Factual basis for denial
  • • Appeal process and deadlines
  • • Contact information for questions
2

Review Your Policy Carefully

Read the actual policy language (not just marketing materials) to understand coverage, exclusions, and definitions.

Key Policy Sections to Review

  • Covered Events: Exact list of qualifying cancellation reasons
  • Pre-Existing Condition Definition: Lookback period and waiver conditions
  • Exclusions: What's explicitly not covered
  • Definitions: How policy defines key terms (e.g., "immediate family," "physician," "emergency")
  • Requirements: Documentation and timeframes for filing
  • Appeals Process: How to challenge denial

Common Policy Interpretation Issues

  • Ambiguity: If policy language is unclear, courts interpret in favor of policyholder
  • Reasonable Expectations: Coverage should match what reasonable person would expect based on marketing
  • Timing: When did coverage begin? Did event occur during coverage period?
  • Causation: Was cancellation directly caused by covered event, or just coincidental?
3

Gather Strong Documentation

Travel insurance claims require extensive documentation. The more proof you provide, the harder it is for insurer to deny.

Medical Claims Documentation

  • • Doctor's statements and diagnoses
  • • Hospital/clinic records
  • • Itemized medical bills
  • • Prescription records
  • • Medical timeline showing emergency nature
  • • Doctor's letter certifying inability to travel
  • • Medical records from lookback period (pre-existing)

Cancellation Claims Documentation

  • • Proof of trip cost (receipts, booking confirmations)
  • • Cancellation penalties charged
  • • Refund statements from airlines/hotels
  • • Documentation of covered event (death certificate, layoff notice, jury duty summons)
  • • Timeline showing when event occurred vs. cancellation

Delay/Baggage Claims Documentation

  • • Delay confirmation from airline
  • • Receipts for meals, hotel, essentials
  • • Baggage delay report (PIR from airline)
  • • Receipts for emergency purchases
  • • Photos of delayed/damaged baggage

Pre-Existing Condition Waiver Proof

  • • Proof of insurance purchase date
  • • Proof of initial trip deposit date
  • • Medical records from lookback period showing stable condition
  • • Evidence insurance purchased within required timeframe (14-21 days)

Pro Tip: Organize documents chronologically with a cover letter explaining timeline. Make it easy for adjuster to see your claim meets all requirements.

4

File Formal Appeal

Most travel insurers have internal appeal process. Follow it carefully and meet all deadlines.

Appeal Letter Should Include

  • Header: Your policy number, claim number, contact info
  • Clear Statement: "I am appealing the denial of my claim dated [date]"
  • Facts: Chronological timeline of events leading to claim
  • Policy Argument: Cite specific policy sections that support your claim
  • Documentation: Reference and attach all supporting documents
  • Request: Specific amount you're claiming and why it's justified
  • Deadline: Request response within 30 days

Effective Appeal Strategies

  • Address Every Denial Reason: Systematically refute each stated basis for denial
  • Policy Language: Quote policy provisions supporting your position
  • Medical Necessity: For medical claims, get doctor to certify emergency nature
  • Pre-Existing Waiver: Prove you met timing and payment requirements
  • Reasonable Interpretation: Argue policy ambiguity should favor you
  • Prior Approvals: Did insurer previously approve related claims? Creates expectation.

Appeal Deadlines

  • • Most insurers: 30-180 days from denial
  • • Check your denial letter for specific deadline
  • • Send via certified mail with tracking
  • • Keep copies of everything
5

Escalate to Regulators & External Resources

If internal appeal fails, external pressure often works.

State Department of Insurance

  • File Complaint: State DOI investigates unfair claim practices
  • Process: Submit complaint online (free), DOI contacts insurer, insurer must respond within 30 days
  • Effectiveness: Insurers often settle to avoid regulatory scrutiny
  • Find Your DOI: Search "[your state] department of insurance consumer complaint"

Credit Card Chargeback

  • • If you purchased travel insurance with credit card, you may be able to dispute charge
  • • File chargeback within 60-120 days of purchase or denied claim
  • • Reason: "Services not provided as described"
  • • Provide denial letter and policy showing coverage should have applied
  • • Success rate: 40-50% depending on card issuer and documentation

Better Business Bureau

  • • File BBB complaint (free) at bbb.org
  • • Insurer must respond within 30 days
  • • Public complaints hurt insurer's reputation
  • • Lower success rate than DOI, but adds pressure

Social Media & Review Sites

  • • Post on insurer's Facebook/Twitter (polite but firm)
  • • Review on Trustpilot, Google Reviews
  • • Companies often respond quickly to public complaints
  • • Can escalate to customer relations team with more authority
6

Consider Legal Action

For larger claims ($3,000+), legal action may be warranted if insurer won't budge.

Small Claims Court (Claims Under $5K-$10K)

  • When to Use: Claim value under your state's small claims limit ($3,000-$10,000 depending on state)
  • Process: File complaint at county courthouse ($30-$100 fee), serve insurer, present case to judge
  • No Attorney Needed: Represent yourself with documentation
  • Timeline: 30-90 days from filing to hearing
  • Success Rate: 60-70% if you have strong documentation

Hire Attorney (Larger Claims)

  • • For claims over $10,000 or complex policy disputes
  • • Many attorneys offer free consultation
  • • Some work on contingency (typically 33-40% of recovery)
  • • Attorney demand letter often prompts settlement
  • • Lawsuit discovery process uncovers insurer's claim file

Arbitration

  • • Some policies require arbitration instead of lawsuit
  • • Check policy for arbitration clause
  • • Faster than court (3-6 months), but can't appeal decision
  • • Cost: $200-$1,500 filing fee, plus arbitrator fees (split with insurer)
  • • Arbitrators often split difference between parties

Cost-Benefit Analysis: Legal action only makes sense if claim value exceeds $2,000-$3,000 minimum. For smaller claims, focus on internal appeals and regulatory complaints.

Frequently Asked Questions

Expert answers to common travel insurance claim questions

What qualifies as a covered trip cancellation reason?

Standard travel insurance covers specific "named perils" - events explicitly listed in the policy. Common covered reasons include:

Typically Covered Reasons

  • Illness or Injury: You, travel companion, or immediate family member becomes ill/injured and doctor certifies inability to travel
  • Death: Death of you, travel companion, or family member
  • Involuntary Job Loss: Layoff (not quitting or being fired for cause) after 1 year employment
  • Job Transfer: Employer relocates you 100+ miles, transfer date within coverage period
  • Natural Disaster: Hurricane, earthquake, flood making destination uninhabitable
  • Terrorist Incident: Attack at destination within 30 days of scheduled arrival
  • Jury Duty/Court Subpoena: Mandatory appearance during trip dates
  • Military Deployment: Called to active duty (if you're in reserves)
  • Home Uninhabitable: Fire, flood, or disaster makes your home unlivable

Typically NOT Covered (Without CFAR)

  • • Change of mind
  • • Work schedule conflicts
  • • Financial circumstances change
  • • Pregnancy (unless complications)
  • • Voluntary job change
  • • Fear of travel (e.g., terrorism news)
  • • Government travel warnings alone (unless specific policy provision)

Definition of "Immediate Family"

Policies define this differently, but typically includes:

  • • Spouse or domestic partner
  • • Children, stepchildren, adopted children
  • • Parents, stepparents, parents-in-law
  • • Siblings
  • • Grandparents, grandchildren
  • • Some policies: aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews

Key Requirement: For medical reasons, doctor must certify you're "medically unable to travel." Being sick but able to travel generally doesn't qualify. Get written physician's statement.

How does the pre-existing condition lookback period work?

The pre-existing condition lookback period is one of the most common reasons for travel insurance claim denials. Understanding it is crucial.

What is a Pre-Existing Condition?

An illness, injury, or medical condition that exists during the lookback period (typically 60-180 days before you purchase insurance). This includes conditions that:

  • • You received medical treatment or consultation for
  • • Medications were prescribed or taken for
  • • Symptoms existed (even if undiagnosed)
  • • A reasonable person would have sought treatment for

Common Lookback Periods

  • 60 days: Most generous (some policies)
  • 90 days: Common standard
  • 120 days: Many comprehensive policies
  • 180 days: More restrictive policies

Pre-Existing Condition Waiver

Most policies offer waiver that nullifies pre-existing exclusion if you meet these requirements:

  • Timing: Purchase insurance within 14-21 days of initial trip deposit (varies by policy)
  • Full Cost: Insure 100% of prepaid, non-refundable trip costs
  • Medically Fit: You and traveling family members are medically able to travel at time of purchase
  • Upgrade Option: Usually requires purchasing comprehensive "cancel for any reason" level coverage

Common Disputes

  • Stable Condition Argument: Even if condition existed, if it was stable (no changes, new treatments, symptoms) during lookback, some policies cover it
  • Unrelated Condition: Insurer may claim condition is pre-existing when it's actually new/unrelated. Get doctor to certify difference.
  • Normal Aging: General age-related changes may not qualify as pre-existing condition
  • Waiver Timing: If you purchased within timeframe but insurer claims you didn't, prove deposit date with bank/credit card statements

Critical Timing: To get pre-existing condition waiver, purchase insurance within 14-21 days of your FIRST trip payment (usually deposit), not within 14-21 days of departure. This is the most common mistake.

Is COVID-19 covered by travel insurance in 2025?

COVID-19 coverage has evolved significantly since 2020. Current coverage depends on when you purchased your policy and what type you bought.

Current COVID Coverage (2024-2025)

  • Medical Treatment: Most policies now cover COVID-related medical expenses abroad (treated like any other illness)
  • Trip Cancellation: Covered if you or travel companion test positive and doctor certifies inability to travel
  • Trip Interruption: Covered if you contract COVID during trip and must return early on doctor's orders
  • Quarantine: Many policies cover additional accommodation/travel costs if you must quarantine abroad
  • Emergency Evacuation: Covered if medically necessary to transport you home for COVID treatment

What's Still Excluded

  • Known Events: If you purchase insurance after government issues travel warning for your destination
  • Fear of Travel: Simply not wanting to travel due to COVID concerns (need CFAR for this)
  • Destination Closures: If your destination closes borders/attractions, may not be covered unless you have "cancel for any reason"
  • Pandemic Exclusion: Some budget policies still have blanket pandemic exclusions - read carefully

How to Maximize COVID Protection

  • • Purchase within 14-21 days of initial deposit (gets pre-existing waiver for any prior COVID)
  • • Look for "pandemic coverage" or "COVID-19 coverage" in policy highlights
  • • Consider "Cancel for Any Reason" (covers COVID-related concerns even without positive test)
  • • Verify policy covers quarantine costs specifically
  • • Check if policy covers trip delays due to positive COVID test before departure

Common COVID Claim Scenarios

  • Covered: You test positive 2 days before departure, doctor says you can't fly, you cancel trip. Standard cancellation coverage applies.
  • Covered: You contract COVID abroad, incur $10K hospital bill. Medical coverage applies.
  • Covered: You test positive at destination, must quarantine 10 days in hotel. Quarantine coverage applies (if in policy).
  • Not Covered: You're worried about COVID variant news and don't want to travel. Need CFAR for this.
  • Not Covered: Destination closes borders before your trip, and you bought insurance after closure announced.
  • Good News: As of 2024-2025, most comprehensive travel insurance policies treat COVID-19 like any other illness, meaning standard coverage applies if you meet policy requirements (positive test, doctor's certification, etc.).

    What's the difference between Cancel For Any Reason (CFAR) and standard cancellation coverage?

    CFAR is the most flexible (and expensive) travel insurance option, but it has important limitations.

    Standard Trip Cancellation

    • Coverage: Only named perils (illness, death, job loss, etc.)
    • Reimbursement: 100% of prepaid, non-refundable costs
    • Documentation: Must prove covered event occurred
    • Cost: 4-10% of trip cost
    • Purchase Timing: Can buy anytime before departure

    Cancel For Any Reason (CFAR)

    • Coverage: Literally any reason (even "changed my mind")
    • Reimbursement: 50-75% of trip cost (NOT 100%)
    • Documentation: None required - no questions asked
    • Cost: 10-20% of trip cost (2-3x standard)
    • Purchase Timing: Must buy within 14-21 days of initial deposit

    CFAR Requirements & Limitations

    • Purchase Window: Must buy within 14-21 days of first trip payment (varies by insurer)
    • Full Trip Coverage: Must insure 100% of prepaid, non-refundable costs
    • Cancellation Timing: Must cancel 48+ hours before scheduled departure (some policies require 72 hours)
    • Partial Reimbursement: Only covers 50-75% of costs, even though you paid for full trip
    • Not Interruption: CFAR only applies to cancellation before departure, not interruption during trip

    When CFAR Makes Sense

    • • High-cost trips ($10,000+) where losing 25-50% is acceptable risk
    • • Uncertain travel plans (work schedule, family circumstances unpredictable)
    • • Destinations with potential instability (political, health, weather)
    • • Traveling during high-risk seasons (hurricane, winter weather)
    • • Peace of mind is worth the extra cost

    When Standard Coverage is Better

    • • Firm travel plans, low cancellation risk
    • • Moderate-cost trips where losing 25-50% would hurt
    • • Main concern is medical issues (covered by standard policy)
    • • Budget-conscious - CFAR premium may not be worth it

    Important: CFAR is NOT the same as a refundable booking. If you book refundable flights/hotels, you don't need CFAR. Only get CFAR if you have non-refundable bookings and want flexibility to cancel for any reason.

    How do medical emergency claims work when traveling abroad?

    Medical emergencies abroad are stressful and expensive. Travel insurance can cover tens or hundreds of thousands in costs, but you must follow proper procedures.

    What's Covered Under Medical Benefits

    • Emergency Medical Treatment: Hospital, doctor, surgery, prescriptions for emergency illness/injury abroad
    • Emergency Dental: Limited coverage ($300-$500) for dental emergencies causing severe pain
    • Emergency Medical Evacuation: Transport to nearest adequate medical facility or home (can cost $50K-$250K)
    • Repatriation: Return of remains if you die abroad (typically $25K-$50K)
    • Follow-up Care: Some policies cover follow-up treatment within 30 days after returning home

    Typical Coverage Limits

    Basic Plans
    • • Medical: $25,000-$50,000
    • • Evacuation: $100,000-$250,000
    • • Dental: $300-$500
    Comprehensive Plans
    • • Medical: $100,000-$500,000
    • • Evacuation: $500,000-$1,000,000
    • • Dental: $500-$1,000

    Critical Steps During Medical Emergency

    1. Call Insurance Company's 24/7 Emergency Line ASAP
      • - Number is on your insurance card/policy documents
      • - They can arrange direct billing with hospital
      • - They'll verify coverage and coordinate care
      • - Failing to call can result in claim denial
    2. Get All Medical Documentation
      • - Diagnosis from doctor
      • - Treatment records
      • - Itemized bills (in English if possible)
      • - Prescriptions and pharmacy receipts
    3. Save All Receipts
      • - Medical bills, pharmacy, transportation
      • - Hospital deposit (often required abroad)
      • - Translation services
      • - Communication costs (calling insurer)
    4. Document Emergency Nature
      • - Get doctor's letter stating treatment was emergency
      • - Timeline showing sudden onset
      • - Photos of injury if applicable

    Common Denial Reasons & How to Avoid

    • "Not an Emergency": Get doctor to certify immediate treatment was medically necessary
    • "Pre-Existing Condition": Prove condition arose during trip or you had pre-existing waiver
    • "Didn't Call Emergency Line": Always call before or immediately after treatment if possible
    • "Treatment Not Covered": Elective procedures, routine care, mental health often excluded - verify coverage
    • "Exceeded Policy Limits": Know your limits; insurer only pays up to maximum stated in policy

    Emergency Evacuation Criteria

    Evacuation (most expensive benefit) is only covered if:

    • • Medical facility at your location cannot provide adequate treatment
    • • Doctor deems it medically necessary to transport you
    • • Insurer's medical team agrees evacuation is necessary
    • • Common evacuations: heart attack in remote area, severe accident requiring specialized surgery, medical repatriation after stabilization

    Critical: Always call your travel insurance emergency line BEFORE or AS SOON AS POSSIBLE after treatment. Many policies require pre-authorization for coverage. Failing to call can result in denial even for legitimate emergencies.

    What are the time limits for filing travel insurance claims?

    Travel insurance has strict deadlines. Missing them can forfeit your claim entirely.

    1. Claim Notification Deadlines

    • Immediate (Medical Emergencies): Call 24/7 emergency line as soon as possible - ideally before or during treatment
    • 20-30 Days (Trip Cancellation/Interruption): Most policies require notification within 20-30 days of cancellation
    • As Soon As Reasonably Possible: General standard for all claims
    • Check Your Policy: Exact deadline is in policy documents - read carefully

    2. Claim Filing Deadlines

    Deadline to submit complete claim with all documentation:

    • Typical: 90 Days from incident date or return from trip
    • Some Policies: 60 Days
    • Others: Up to 1 Year (less common)
    • Medical Claims: Often have longer window (6 months to 1 year) since bills may arrive late

    3. Specific Claim Type Deadlines

    Baggage Delay/Loss
    • • File report with airline immediately (PIR - Property Irregularity Report)
    • • Notify insurer within 24-48 hours
    • • Submit claim within 20-30 days
    Travel Delay
    • • Get delay confirmation from airline/cruise line
    • • Keep receipts for expenses during delay
    • • File within 20-30 days of return
    Medical Emergencies
    • • Call emergency line immediately (most critical)
    • • Submit claim within 90 days (but give notice ASAP)
    • • Can extend if awaiting medical records

    What If You Miss the Deadline?

    • File Anyway: Some insurers are flexible, especially if you have good reason for delay
    • Explain Reason: Provide explanation for late filing (hospitalization, language barrier, didn't receive bills, etc.)
    • Statute of Limitations: Even if you miss policy deadline, state law may give you 1-3 years to sue insurer for breach of contract
    • Bad Faith: If insurer didn't clearly communicate deadlines, you may have argument for late filing acceptance

    Best Practices to Meet Deadlines

    1. Save insurer's emergency contact number in phone before you travel
    2. Take photo of policy document and save to phone/cloud
    3. If incident occurs, call insurer same day or next day
    4. Document everything immediately (photos, receipts, reports)
    5. Start claim paperwork as soon as you return home
    6. Don't wait for all documents - file initial claim, send additional docs later if needed
    7. Send claims certified mail with tracking

    Most Important Deadline: For medical emergencies, calling the 24/7 emergency line immediately is CRITICAL. This single call can be difference between full coverage and denial. Program the number into your phone before you travel.

    How does travel insurance interact with other coverage (health insurance, credit cards, etc.)?

    You may have overlapping coverage from multiple sources. Understanding coordination can maximize your recovery.

    Your Health Insurance Abroad

    • Domestic Plans: Most US health insurance has NO or LIMITED coverage abroad
    • Medicare: Generally does NOT cover healthcare outside US (except limited coverage in Canada/Mexico near border)
    • HMOs: Typically no out-of-network coverage, especially international
    • PPOs: May have emergency coverage abroad, but often at out-of-network rates (higher deductibles/copays)
    • Primary vs. Secondary: Most travel insurance is secondary (pays after your health insurance). You must file with health insurance first if they offer any coverage.

    Credit Card Travel Benefits

    Many premium credit cards include travel insurance if you book trip with the card:

    • Trip Cancellation: Typically $5,000-$10,000 per trip (only covers portion paid with card)
    • Trip Delay: $500 per ticket after 6-12 hour delay
    • Baggage Delay: $100-$200 per day for essentials
    • Lost Luggage: $3,000-$5,000 per passenger
    • Medical Evacuation: Some premium cards offer $100K-$500K
    • Limitations: Coverage only for portion paid with card; excludes pre-existing conditions; shorter coverage periods

    How to Coordinate Multiple Coverages

    1. Identify All Your Coverage:
      • - Travel insurance policy
      • - Health insurance (check international coverage)
      • - Credit card benefits
      • - Airline/hotel/cruise line insurance
      • - Employer-provided travel coverage
    2. File With Primary Coverage First:
      • - For medical: Usually health insurance (if they cover international)
      • - For trip costs: Usually standalone travel insurance
      • - Get Explanation of Benefits (EOB) showing what was paid/denied
    3. File With Secondary Coverage:
      • - Submit claim with EOB from primary
      • - Secondary pays remaining balance (up to their limits)
      • - Can't collect more than actual expenses (no double-dipping)
    4. Maximize Recovery Strategically:
      • - Use coverage with highest limits for major expenses
      • - Use credit card for specific categories they cover well (baggage delay)
      • - Submit different expense categories to different insurers if allowed

    Airline/Hotel/Cruise Insurance vs. Standalone Travel Insurance

    Supplier Insurance (Usually Avoid)
    • • Only covers supplier bankruptcy/default
    • • Excludes pre-existing conditions (no waiver)
    • • Minimal medical coverage
    • • Limited cancellation reasons
    • • Conflict of interest (supplier investigating own claim)
    Standalone Travel Insurance (Better)
    • • Covers all suppliers (flight, hotel, tours)
    • • Pre-existing waiver available
    • • Comprehensive medical coverage
    • • More cancellation reasons
    • • Independent third-party adjudication

    Pro Tip: Even if you have credit card travel insurance, consider buying standalone policy for comprehensive trips. Credit card coverage has significant gaps (pre-existing conditions, only covers card-paid portion, lower limits). Use credit card coverage as secondary/supplemental.

    Success Stories

    Real results from people who fought back against unfair travel insurance denials

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