The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Travel

CHECKLIST: HOW TO BUY TRAVEL INSURANCE

- Nick Trend

Some travel insurance seems astonishin­gly cheap – but, like most things, you get what you pay for. A low price almost always means low cover limits, high excesses and lots of exclusions. Here is how to obtain good cover at a decent price.

1. CONSIDER A MULTI-TRIP POLICY

These cover all the travelling you do in a calendar year, with limits on the length of each individual trip. Whether it is cheaper to buy one of these than separate policies every time you travel depends how much travelling you do in a year – three or four trips will usually mean you save with multi-trip cover. The other huge advantage of a multi-trip policy is that you are covered continuous­ly and don’t have to shop for a new policy each time you book. You can normally chose, in order of cost, between worldwide cover, worldwide without North America, or Europe only.

2. LOOK FOR MULTIPLE COVER

It is normally cheaper to buy cover for a couple, or a family, under one policy – the best annual policies will also allow each of the insured to travel independen­tly.

3. CHECK THE LIMITS

Policy limits for different aspects of cover can be irritating­ly out of balance. Insurers are often mean over baggage and cancellati­on, and set unnecessar­ily high limits (or no limit at all) for medical cover. My own policy with PJ Hayman (see right) has the following cover, though I could have paid more for higher amounts: cancellati­on (£5,000), emergency medical cover (£10 million), baggage

(£2,000), missed departure (£750), personal liability (£2million). It also has a useful extra – £2,500 cover against the financial failure of an airline or travel company. The excess is £75.

4. WATCH FOR EXCLUSIONS

All policies should include a list of sports and activities that are automatica­lly covered, and those which need an extra premium to be included. You need to check these through carefully. Some may have exclusions for surprising­ly ordinary activities, such as some kinds of trekking, for example. Note that winter sports is now usually an optional extra on multi-trip policies – typically with an extra premium for up to 17 days a year. Look out for restrictio­ns – on off-piste skiing or boarding, or lack of cover for skis left unattended and unsecured, for example.

5. CHECK FOR AGE LIMITS

Insurance for travellers over 65 is becoming considerab­ly more expensive. See our online guide at telegraph.co.uk/ tt-travelinsu­ranceover-65.

6. CHOOSE A GOOD PROVIDER

I buy my policy from PJ Hayman (pjhayman.com) because I think the cover is exceptiona­lly good. Which? (which.co.uk) recommends the following providers: HSBC (hsbc.co.uk), First Direct (first direct.com), LV (lv.com/travelinsu­rance) and M&S Bank (bank. marksand spencer.com).

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