The determination of whether you should purchase travel insurance
is a determination of whether you want to assume nothing bad
can happen during your travels, or whether should something
bad happen you can adequately resolve these unforeseen events.
None of us think something bad will happen. We assume incorrectly
that fire, flood, earthquake and terrorism will happen to others.
We assume we won't have a heart attack or stroke, we won't be
felled by illness. We assume wrong.
The question, "should you purchase travel insurance" is perhaps
answered by asking yourself why you purchased homeowners insurance,
or medical insurance or life insurance. You purchased them so
that your consistent small payments would assure you of having
someone else provide help in case of a catastrophic event for
which you are unprepared. Purchasing travel insurance, just
like purchasing any other insurance, is not just about receiving
the funds to recover. It's also about having the professional
assistance of those who know what has to happen for you and
your family to recover, and who do make that happen. It's about
cooler heads prevailing.
Should you purchase travel insurance? Well, let's look at a
few things that could, and do happen, to overseas and even domestic
travelers. Then, you decide if you should purchase travel insurance.
You're from Minnesota. You've never been to the ocean. You
book a hotel room in Florida for a week but you are then ordered
to evacuate due to an expected hurricane. But you have non-refundable
airline tickets, and your hotel and rental car are already paid
for. How do you replace the airline tickets and get reimbursed
for your stay? If you had known this was going to happen, what
would your answer have been to the question, "Should you purchase
travel insurance?"
You're on an island in the Caribbean, ready for your cruise
back home. You find out that the cruise ship company has gone
bankrupt and there will be no return cruise. What do you do?
How do you get your money back? Most importantly, how do you
get back home? If you had known this was going to happen, what
would your answer have been to the question, "Should you purchase
travel insurance?"
You're ready to take your family on a much-needed vacation
to Hawaii. Your daughter is felled by an attack of appendicitis
and must have immediate surgery. But your airline tickets are
non-refundable. How do you get your money back? If you had known
this was going to happen, what would your answer have been to
the question, "Should you purchase travel insurance?"
About The Author
Steve Cogger is an avid traveler offering a wealth of travel
information. For more information or to purchase travel insurance
visit http://www.1-Happy-Traveller.com.