Insurance is often viewed as the final safety net for international travel risk.
Policies are in place, premiums are paid, and there’s a reasonable assumption that if something serious happens, support will follow. In many cases, that assumption holds. In others, organisations only discover the limits of their cover when they are already dealing with a live issue.
The challenge isn’t that insurance doesn’t work. It’s that it doesn’t always work in the way people expect.
Travel and security insurance is frequently positioned as simple and reassuring. One number to call. Global coverage. Clear support when things go wrong.
Over time, this can lead to assumptions such as:
None of these assumptions are unreasonable. But all of them depend on specific policy wording, definitions and operating models.
Insurance is built on definitions, thresholds and exclusions. Those definitions can vary significantly between providers and policies, and they don’t always align neatly with real-world scenarios.
For example:
None of this is unusual in insurance, and this doesn’t suggest they are sub-standard. The risk arises when these details haven’t been explored before an incident occurs.
Where things often become most challenging is when duty of care, expectation and financial responsibility collide.
In an escalating situation, questions arise quickly:
The legal position, the moral expectation and the reputational impact don’t always align. Insurance may provide clarity on what is covered, but it rarely resolves how an organisation feels about the decision it is being asked to make.
These moments place significant pressure on security, HR and leadership teams to act quickly, with incomplete information and high visibility.
Some insurance and assistance providers offer broad, integrated services, which can be extremely valuable. At the same time, it’s worth understanding how delivery actually works in practice.
In many cases, support is provided through a network of partners, subcontractors or local providers. That isn’t inherently a weakness, but it does mean capability, handover and escalation processes are important to understand in advance.
Organisations should take the time to ask:
More mature travel risk programmes treat insurance as one component of a wider framework, not the framework itself.
They:
This approach doesn’t reduce the value of insurance. It makes its role clearer and more effective, where there is an understanding of gaps and limitations, and what needs to happen outside of that.
The real role of insurance in travel risk
Insurance plays an essential role in managing financial exposure and accessing certain forms of support. What it doesn’t do is remove the need for judgement, coordination and clarity when situations evolve.
In complex travel scenarios, organisations don’t just need cover. They need to understand how that cover operates in practice.
The most resilient travel risk management programmes are designed with this in mind. They don’t assume the safety net will catch everything. They take the time to understand where it stretches, where it doesn’t, and how to manage the space in between.
A useful way to pressure-test insurance cover is not just by reading the policy end to end, but by also asking practical questions based on real scenarios. The answers often reveal where assumptions exist.
Some questions worth asking include:
None of these questions are designed to catch providers out. They’re designed to create clarity before clarity is urgently needed.
If your confidence in your travel risk posture rests largely on insurance, it may be worth asking a simple question:
Do we fully understand how it works when we actually need it?
Because clarity before an incident is far easier to achieve than certainty during one.
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