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American Express Platinum makes a big change to its travel insurance – but hasn’t told us (or you)

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One of the key benefits of The Platinum Card from American Express is the travel insurance that comes with it.  It covers a lot of people – the cardholder, supplementary cardholders, their partners and dependent children under the age of 25, whether travelling together or alone and whether on business or leisure trips.

If you hand out your supplementary cards wisely, you can cover a lot of people.  My Mum had a supplementary card on my account for many years until she reached 70, which is the cut-off point.

You are not FULLY covered however ….

Since the last ‘refresh’ of The Platinum Card, it has been necessary to pay with an American Express card in order to receive the full insurance coverage.

If you wanted to claim for any of the following:

  • Cancelling, Postponing and Abandoning your Trip
  • Cutting Short your Trip
  • Travel Inconvenience
  • Personal Belongings, Money and Travel Documents
  • Purchase Protection
  • Refund Protection

….. then it was necessary to have paid on an American Express card as long as the hotel or airline accepted it.

For medical and other ‘big stuff’, you are covered irrespective of how you paid for your trip.  It is only claims under the categories above which require you to have used an American Express card.

But which card did you have to pay with?

This is the key bit.

The insurance policy USED to say that you could use:

“your consumer and small business cards issued by American Express in the UK, excluding corporate cards and any American Express cards issued by bank partners”

This meant that you could use ANY qualifying American Express card.  A lot of Head for Points readers would pay on their British Airways American Express Premium Plus card because:

1.5 Avios per £1 is worth more than 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 on Platinum

the spend would count towards the £10,000 for the annual ‘2 for 1’ Avios voucher

British Airways spending charged to a BAPP card earns double points, so 3 Avios per £1

American Express has now changed the rules

Here is the new insurance document dated March 2019 (PDF).

Turn to page 6 and look at the definition of ‘Account’.

It says that you must now pay on The Platinum Card to be fully covered by the insurance.  You will invalidate your claim if you pay with a British Airways American Express Premium Plus, or a Preferred Rewards Gold (which offers double points for airline spend and double points abroad), or a Starwood Preferred Guest American Express (which offers double points at Marriott hotels).

As you’ve not been told, it doesn’t yet apply to you

According to the rules of the insurance, American Express has to give you 30 days notice of any changes.  Whilst the new policy is in force for new cardholders, no existing cardholders have yet been notified of the change as far as I know.

Until you receive a letter, you have nothing to worry about.  There is a chance that American Express will not change the terms for existing cardholders, although I consider that unlikely.

What is NOT clear to me is what happens to existing bookings.  If you book a British Airways flight today on your Premium Plus Amex, purely because you know you will still be covered under the Platinum insurance, what happens if / when American Express gives you 30 days notice of the change?  Is your existing trip still fully covered or will Amex impose the new rules?

Has American Express made any other changes to the insurance?

I don’t know.  If / when we are officially notified of the changes to our own policies I would expect Amex to include a list of any other changes.


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Comments (235)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Russ says:

    Amex have been making some interesting changes recently: 90,000 cap on referrals, no bonus for 24 months and now a reduction in insurance cover. The first two we were informed of, the latter we weren’t. Yet we have yet to receive any improvement in benefits, not one.

    I’m disappointed to read this hasn’t been conveyed to us on officially headed paper as seems fitting for a card commanding £450 a year, and instead rely on David, whom I personally do not know.

  • Andy says:

    “- Up to £300 for missed departure due to accident or breakdown, travel delay, overbooking, or missed connection”

    I’m sure this used to be MUCH more than £300 for missed departure….I think £1200?!

    • Andy says:

      Oh actually this seems to be unchanged looking at my booklet from 05/17 which says Chubb provided the insurance then

      • ADMG says:

        Chubb (ACE) have been the AMEX global insurance partner for years.

      • ChrisC says:

        Even back in 2015 it was £300 underwritten by ACE and IPA.

        Axa have been really good broke my ankle back in Nov and had to cancel a xmas and NY trip paid out within 10 days of sending the claim form all booked on the BAPP

  • Cam says:

    The International Currency Card Plat insurance has also switched over to Chubb. However, I didn’t see a limitation on paying with the relevant card having been introduced. The ICC policy was historically less restrictive, which appears to still be the case – fortunately so, or I would be cancelling!

  • Hatty H says:

    Applied for Plat card on Tuesday and card arrived today. In the enclosed T&Cs the underwriters reflect as Chubb and IPA but the definitions of “Card” and “Card Account” are still showing as previously ie
    “your consumer and small business cards issued by American Express in the UK, excluding corporate cards and any American Express cards issued by bank partners”

    • Rob says:

      Weird. Perhaps it is a very recent change – but the online document is dated March and that is the document they are letting people see before they apply.

    • Grant says:

      Having now read it in a bit more detail, mine is the same. Applied last weekend and received the card on Thursday.

  • nick says:

    to be fair it’s not really Amex’ fault. They are impacted (directly or indirectly, depending on the card) by the EU laws that cap interchange. Those changes have made significant differences to the amounts that card issuers earn from transactions.

    • Rob says:

      Not on Platinum, which is not capped.

      • Mya says:

        +1 This is looks an awful lot like Amex falling out of love with Brexit Britain. Then again, after being in the UK for 56 years with a smallish market share, who can blaming them.

        • Alan says:

          Certainly European trip costs will go up for insurers with no EHIC to help keep them down .

        • Mark2 says:

          Surely they can see that we shall not leaving in any real sense

          • Rob says:

            Amex’s market share in every other EU country is FAR smaller than it is here.

  • @mkcol says:

    It’s bits & bobs like this & other recent changes which is putting me increasingly off AMEX in general and this card in particular.

    • Alan says:

      The main thing keeping me with them for now is the excellent run of Amex Offers in recent months. Use PP a lot and would have less use of the bundled extras (mobile phone insurance, etc.) that packaged bank accounts offer vs the hotel status, etc. with Plat.

      • Alex G says:

        Mobile phone insurance? since when is that offered as a part of the Amex platinum?

        • Alan says:

          Ermm I didn’t say it was – I was comparing it to the packaged bank accounts that mostly do? 😉

  • JimmySitxx says:

    Amex really doesn’t want to be in the UK market, does it.

    • Jeremy says:

      What will Rob do though if he can’t push Amex or Curve to pay for his nanny?!?!

  • dom dom says:

    lol, all these people on huge salaries paying £450 a year for a credit card screaming and shouting about insurance changes makes me laugh. Geta free card and pay for your own travel insurance

    • Rob says:

      MoneySavingExpert’s preferred policy is £200, to put it in context. And that is just for a family group – Plat can cover FIVE family groups if you give a member of each family a supplementary card on your account. Plat is aggressively cheaper as long as the policy holds up.

    • Starfall says:

      I have the business platinum and can second this. Every insurance claim made was settled quickly and without hassle. For the smaller claims, all it took was one phone call and the approval for the claim was instant over the phone.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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