How to Make a Travel Insurance Claim (And Actually Get Paid)

Purchasing travel insurance is only half the job. When something goes wrong overseas, knowing how to file a claim correctly, and what documentation to gather, is the difference between a smooth payout and a frustrating rejection.

Before You Leave: Set Yourself Up for Success

  • Save your insurer’s 24/7 emergency assistance number in your phone and write it down separately
  • Email yourself a copy of your policy documents and Certificate of Insurance
  • Know your policy number
  • Understand your key exclusions (adventure activities, pre-existing conditions, alcohol-related incidents)

During the Event: Critical First Steps

For medical emergencies: Call your insurer’s emergency assistance number before arranging anything (except life-threatening emergencies requiring immediate ambulance). The insurer coordinates and pre-approves treatment, skipping this step can result in delayed or reduced reimbursement.

For theft or loss: Report the incident to the local police within 24 hours and obtain a written police report. This is required for virtually every personal belongings claim. Without a police report, most insurers will not pay.

For trip disruption: Get written documentation from the airline, hotel, or tour operator explaining why the disruption occurred. Keep all receipts for additional expenses.

What Documentation Do You Need?

  • Medical claims: Doctor’s reports, hospital records, itemised bills, prescriptions, receipts for all medical expenses
  • Theft/loss claims: Police report, proof of ownership for stolen items, serial numbers for electronics
  • Trip cancellation: Booking confirmations, cancellation certificates, medical certificate if cancelled due to illness
  • Travel delay: Airline written confirmation of delay and reason, receipts for meals and accommodation during delay

Common Reasons Claims Are Rejected

  • Excluded activity, check exclusions before the activity
  • No police report for theft, always report within 24 hours
  • Pre-existing condition not declared, always declare
  • Failure to notify insurer before arranging treatment, always call first
  • Claim lodged too late, check your policy’s time limits
  • Insufficient documentation, keep everything

If Your Claim Is Rejected

Ask for the rejection reason in writing and the specific policy clause cited. If you believe the rejection is wrong, lodge a formal complaint with the insurer’s internal dispute resolution team. If that fails, escalate to the Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA), it’s free and independent.