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Medical Timing Decides Travel Insurance Claim Dispute

What Australian travellers should check before cancelling a trip

Medical Timing Decides Travel Insurance Claim Dispute?w=400

The information on this website is general in nature and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation, or needs. Consider seeking personal advice from a licensed adviser before acting on any information.

A recent travel insurance dispute reported by Insurance News has put a spotlight on one of the most important parts of any cancellation claim: timing.
The case involved a policyholder who argued that a doctor’s declaration that he could not travel overseas was the relevant claimable event, rather than the earlier appearance of illness.
The policyholder was successful, reinforcing that the way a medical issue is documented can be just as important as the condition itself.

For Australian travellers, the lesson is practical. Travel insurance is designed to respond to defined events under the policy wording, not simply to every inconvenience or health concern that arises before departure. When illness interrupts a trip, insurers will usually look closely at when symptoms began, when medical advice was sought, when the traveller became unfit to travel, and whether the condition was known, diagnosed or excluded before the policy was bought.

That distinction matters because many disputes turn on whether an event was unexpected. If a traveller already had symptoms, was awaiting test results, or had been told further investigation was needed, an insurer may examine whether the cancellation was connected to a pre-existing or known medical issue. On the other hand, a formal medical certificate stating that a traveller is unfit to travel may help establish the point at which the insured event occurred, depending on the policy terms.

This case should not be read as a guarantee that similar claims will always be paid. Each policy has its own definitions, waiting periods, exclusions and evidence requirements. Some policies treat undiagnosed symptoms differently from diagnosed conditions. Others may exclude claims linked to existing medical conditions unless the traveller completed a health assessment and the insurer agreed to cover the condition.

Before booking an overseas trip, travellers should review the Product Disclosure Statement and compare travel insurance options against their actual health, itinerary and cancellation exposure. The cheapest policy may not be the best fit if you have ongoing symptoms, a recent referral, a planned procedure, or a family member whose health could affect your travel plans.

The claims takeaway is equally clear: keep records. Save medical certificates, appointment notes, test dates, booking confirmations and cancellation invoices. Contact the insurer before cancelling where possible, and ask what evidence is required. If you are unsure how a condition or exclusion may apply, seeking guidance from a broker or adviser can help you understand the cover before a stressful claim situation develops.

Published:Sunday, 21st Jun 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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Copayment:
A fixed amount you pay for a covered healthcare service, usually when you receive the service.