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Guide

Travel Insurance With Pre-Existing Conditions UK: Screening, Declaring & Specialist Cover

By Emma Walsh 9 min read
Quick Answer

UK travel insurers ask medical screening questions at quote stage, and you must answer them accurately — an undeclared pre-existing condition can void claims, sometimes including claims unrelated to that condition. "Pre-existing" typically means any condition you have received treatment, medication, tests, or a specialist referral for within a set look-back period (commonly one to two years, longer for serious conditions). Most declared conditions can be covered for an added premium or a condition exclusion; if you are declined or quoted an unaffordable premium, the FCA requires insurers to signpost you to MoneyHelper's directory of specialist medical travel insurers rather than leaving you uninsured.

What actually counts as pre-existing

Policies define a pre-existing condition by a look-back window: any illness or injury for which you have taken medication, received treatment, had tests or investigations, or seen a specialist within a set period before buying the policy — commonly the last 12 to 24 months. Serious diagnoses such as heart conditions, strokes, cancer, and psychiatric conditions typically have longer or unlimited look-back periods and are asked about explicitly regardless of when they occurred.

Policies define a pre-existing condition by a look-back window: any illness or injury for which you have taken medication, received treatment, had tests or investigations, or seen a specialist within a set period before buying the policy — commonly the last 12 to 24 months. Serious diagnoses such as heart conditions, strokes, cancer, and psychiatric conditions typically have longer or unlimited look-back periods and are asked about explicitly regardless of when they occurred.

The definition catches more than people expect: a routine medication review for blood pressure, an asthma inhaler on repeat prescription, or physiotherapy for a back problem all usually count. The screening question is not "are you ill?" but "have you interacted with medical care for this?" — answer on that basis.

Why under-declaring is the most expensive mistake in travel insurance

If a claim reveals an undeclared condition, the insurer can reduce or refuse the claim — and where the non-disclosure is judged deliberate or reckless, void the policy from inception, which can sink every claim on the trip. A £60 saving on premium against a five-figure medical repatriation bill is the worst trade in travel.

If a claim reveals an undeclared condition, the insurer can reduce or refuse the claim — and where the non-disclosure is judged deliberate or reckless, void the policy from inception, which can sink every claim on the trip. A £60 saving on premium against a five-figure medical repatriation bill is the worst trade in travel.

Under the Consumer Insurance (Disclosure and Representations) Act 2012, your duty is to take reasonable care to answer the insurer's questions accurately — you are not expected to volunteer information you were never asked for. Practically: read each screening question, answer it fully, and keep the quote confirmation showing your answers.

Cover, exclusion, or decline — the three screening outcomes

Most declared conditions are insurable: the screener prices the added risk and the policy covers the condition like any other illness. The second outcome is an exclusion — the policy is issued but claims arising from that condition (and sometimes linked conditions) are not covered; this can be acceptable for a stable condition you are comfortable self-funding but is risky for anything that could plausibly need emergency care abroad.

Most declared conditions are insurable: the screener prices the added risk and the policy covers the condition like any other illness. The second outcome is an exclusion — the policy is issued but claims arising from that condition (and sometimes linked conditions) are not covered; this can be acceptable for a stable condition you are comfortable self-funding but is risky for anything that could plausibly need emergency care abroad.

A decline, or a premium quoted so high it amounts to one, triggers a regulatory backstop: since 2021 the FCA has required firms to signpost consumers with medical-condition cover problems to MoneyHelper's specialist travel insurance directory, which lists firms whose business is covering serious conditions. Specialist comparison services for medical conditions quote across such panels in one screening pass.

GHIC, destination choice, and other premium levers

A GHIC card meaningfully complements — never replaces — insurance for EU trips with a medical condition: state-tariff treatment under GHIC can reduce what the insurer pays, and some insurers waive the excess on medical claims where a GHIC was used. Destination is the other big lever: the USA, Canada, and the Caribbean carry the highest medical-cost loadings, so a traveller with a significant condition often finds Europe dramatically cheaper to insure than Florida.

A GHIC card meaningfully complements — never replaces — insurance for EU trips with a medical condition: state-tariff treatment under GHIC can reduce what the insurer pays, and some insurers waive the excess on medical claims where a GHIC was used. Destination is the other big lever: the USA, Canada, and the Caribbean carry the highest medical-cost loadings, so a traveller with a significant condition often finds Europe dramatically cheaper to insure than Florida.

Also worth comparing: annual versus single-trip pricing behaves differently with declared conditions (screening applies to the whole policy year), and cruise cover is usually a separate question because onboard medical care and medical disembarkation are costed differently. Our annual vs single-trip guide covers the format choice.

Before you pack — pre-trip essentials

Flight and hotel links convert late. Finance, FX, insurance, and gear decisions happen weeks earlier — when professionals budget for long-haul stays. These picks fund FlightLogic without touching editorial scores.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens if I don't declare a condition on UK travel insurance?

The insurer can reduce or refuse claims connected to it, and if the non-disclosure is judged deliberate or reckless it can void the policy entirely — potentially invalidating unrelated claims too. Screening answers are checked against medical records when large claims are assessed.

Where can I get travel insurance if I've been refused cover?

MoneyHelper, the government-backed money guidance service, maintains a directory of specialist medical travel insurers. UK insurers who decline you or quote an exceptionally high premium because of a medical condition are required by the FCA to point you to it. Specialist comparison services for pre-existing conditions quote across similar panels.

Do stable, medicated conditions still need declaring?

Yes. A condition controlled by repeat prescription — high blood pressure, asthma, high cholesterol, diabetes — is exactly what screening questions target. Stable and managed usually just means a modest premium adjustment, but it must be declared to be covered.

Does a GHIC card cover pre-existing conditions in Europe?

A GHIC entitles you to medically necessary state healthcare in the EU, including routine care for pre-existing and chronic conditions, at the same cost as a local resident. It does not cover repatriation, private hospitals, or non-EU destinations — so it complements, rather than replaces, a policy with the condition declared. Some treatments like dialysis need pre-arranging with the destination provider.

Is travel insurance more expensive after cancer or a heart condition?

Usually, and these conditions are screened regardless of how long ago they occurred. Premiums fall as time passes since treatment ended. Specialist insurers and the MoneyHelper directory exist precisely for this market, and destination choice (Europe rather than the USA) makes a large difference to the premium.

Written by Emma Walsh

Editor, Hotels & Europe

Emma reviews boutique and independent hotels across Europe, alongside British Airways and Oneworld product reviews. She writes FlightLogic's Avios redemption guides.

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410K+Miles Flown
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5 yrsCovering Travel