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All insurers are pretty good when it comes to selling policies and taking your premium. And, thankfully, the vast, vast majority of people travel without needing to claim and thereby have no basis on which to judge that other, important side of this business.
This is generic advice about ALL insurance; many people do not appreciate (or can't believe, even) this subtlety:
You must tell the insurer about absolutely everything that may affect their assessment of your risk - regardless of how important you think it is. Failure to do so invalidates the entire policy. Failure to do so means that you have paid a premium and potentially bought absolutely nothing whatsoever with it. This is the essence of the law relating to insurance.
Insurers employ teams of loss adjusters whose sole role is to limit payouts. Sure, if you make a trivial claim for a lost basic mobile phone (say) they may pay up without challenging, but if you hit some internal threshold these people will be involved and their job is to look for all and any means to save their principals money. In the case of travel, they may very well inspect your medical records (for example) and can and will, entirely legally, use ANY omission on your part to void the entire policy - yes even for a claim that is entirely unrelated to the omitted condition.
Travelling with another person whose insurance is with a different company and/or bought at a different time? THEIR risk profile affects YOUR policy. If they have a condition that may affect your travel (e.g. by curtailment, cancellation, extension, etc., etc., ) then YOUR insurer needs to know about it.
And so on. |
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