Miles Brignall 

EasyJet’s travel insurance said ‘no’ to my valid claim

My daughter was taken ill with an unforeseen infection after our booking and couldn’t make the trip
  
  

easyJet travel insurance is in partnership with Collinson and underwritten by Zurich Insurance.
easyJet travel insurance is in partnership with Collinson and underwritten by Zurich Insurance. Photograph: n/a

On 18 February I booked a half-term holiday trip for my family to Portugal. I bought the flight with easyJet and, at the same time, bought the airline’s travel insurance provided by Collinson.

A week before we were due to fly, while visiting family in the Netherlands, my four-year-old daughter was diagnosed with bacterial pneumonia and given oral antibiotics. These were not effective and she was rushed to hospital.

It was obvious the Portugal trip was off so I claimed on the policy, providing all necessary documents, including a declaration from a doctor at the Dutch hospital stating that she had caught pneumonia and was unfit to fly.

I received a phone call from Collinson from an agent who seemed ready to settle the claim over the phone, but stopped once I said I was claiming for our non-refundable hotel bills, as well as the flights.

The next day I received a short, generic email saying my claim had been denied. The reason stated is: “I can see from the details provided that the person giving rise to your claim was not considered stable at the time of booking your trip … we cannot consider these circumstances as unforeseen.”

This was ludicrous. A pneumonia infection cannot be foreseen. My daughter was a healthy child and was attending school at the time of the booking.

Surely this kind of case is exactly what insurance is for. The policy has a £3,000 maximum for emergency cancellation which would allow me to recover about 90% of the expenses.

JP, by email

I agree that this is exactly the kind of scenario that travel insurance is designed to cover – a last-minute medical emergency that was not foreseen.

In the end, your daughter was in the Dutch hospital for three weeks. Happily she is better now.

I struggled to find someone at Collinson to discuss this matter as its dealings are all seemingly online. When I was finally able to find the right person, the company quickly established that your claim was genuine – it appears you may have ticked the wrong box by accident. The claim has now been paid in full.

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