Who can use this letter
- You hold a valid travel insurance policy that was in force at the time of the event
- The claim falls within a category your policy covers (cancellation, curtailment, medical expenses, delayed or lost belongings, etc.)
- You are notifying the insurer within the timeframe set out in your policy documents
Before you send it
- Re-read your policy wording for the specific evidence required for your type of claim (medical certificates, police reports, receipts, airline confirmation of a delay).
- Check the claim notification deadline in your policy — many require notification "as soon as reasonably possible" or within a set number of days.
- Gather all supporting documents: booking confirmations, receipts, medical reports, airline/PIR references, and correspondence with any other party (e.g. the airline, if you are also claiming UK261 or Montreal Convention compensation separately).
- Note that insurers usually will not pay out for anything already recoverable elsewhere (e.g. baggage compensation from the airline) — claim from the airline first where relevant, then insurance for any shortfall.
The template
Fill in every [BRACKETED] field with your own details before sending — do not send
this letter with placeholders still in it.
How to send it
- Check whether your insurer requires claims through a specific online portal or app first — use this letter as a cover summary or a follow-up if the online process is slow or unclear.
- Send scanned copies of original documents; keep the originals until the claim is fully resolved.
- Email or use recorded post so you can prove when the insurer received your claim.
If you don't get a response
Insurers should acknowledge a claim quickly and keep you updated on progress. If a claim is delayed, disputed, or rejected and you believe this is unfair, you can raise a formal complaint with the insurer, and if unresolved after 8 weeks, refer the matter to the Financial Ombudsman Service free of charge.