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My experience with Amex Platinum’s new insurance provider

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In January 2025, American Express moved from AXA to Europ Assistance to provide travel insurance benefits for holders of The Platinum Card.

It’s fair to say that this has not gone as well as it could. We have heard numerous reports from readers of Europ attempting to refuse payment for valid claims.

For example, car hire claims were being refused because the rental was not paid on an American Express card, even though this is not a requirement of the policy.

My experience with Amex Platinum's new insurance provider

We damaged a rental car in Germany last month – not deliberately for the purposes of this article! – so I had a chance to put Europ to the test.

Europ Assistance makes it easy to submit a claim

The first thing I should say is that Europ has an efficient online portal for managing American Express Platinum insurance claims. You can find it here.

I had delayed filing my claim, even though it was for a chunky amount (€765), because I couldn’t face the hassle. It turns out, all credit to Europ Assistance, that there wasn’t any.

Obviously car rental claims are more ‘open and shut’ than a medical claim, but the process was still very simple.

Three documents were required. Helpfully Sixt had sent me the bill for the damage and the description / photo of the damage as two separate PDF files, which is how Europ requires you to upload them. Sixt had also emailed me a PDF of my original invoice. This meant that I had everything I needed.

The whole process was completed online. Completing the form took less than ten minutes. I was told that I would receive an initial response within five days.

A couple of oddities

The only issue is that I received an email from Europ a few minutes later saying that my claim was ‘saved but not submitted’. This made no sense because the tracker on the Europ website clearly showed my claim as ‘submitted’.

I suspect that the email was triggered in the few minutes when I left the half-completed claim form open in another window whilst I downloaded PDFs of the documents requested.

I had paid for my rental and the damage (which Sixt had sent me a payment link to pay – it didn’t automatically charge the same card) on The Platinum Card. However, during the claims process Europ Assistance asked for my bank account details because it is not allowed to pay claims back to an Amex card!

On the upside, this meant the Membership Rewards points earned from paying Sixt €765 were not going to be lost due to a later refund to my card.

On the downside, I was concerned that the 2.99% foreign exchange fee I had paid to Amex on the €765 would not be refunded. Was I on the hook – assuming no movement in FX rates – for a €23 loss even if my claim was paid in full?

Also on the downside, I would be on the hook for an FX fee from HSBC when I received money from Europ Assistance if it paid me back in Euro to my current account.

As a reminder, for car rental claims there is no requirement to have paid for the original rental or any damages with an Amex card, although I always do so because I believe it may speed up settlement of any claim.

My experience with Amex Platinum's new insurance provider

What happened next?

I submitted my claim on 11th August.

Three days later I received an email asking for more documents:

  • the original rental agreement
  • proof of payment of the damages claim

It’s not clear why these documents were not asked for originally. I had the PDF of the rental agreement from Sixt, and handily the Amex website lets you create a PDF statement part-way through a billing period, so it was easy to get that. I submitted both documents on the same day.

The Amex statement showed the Sterling charge (£687.83) so Europ now knew what I had actually paid, including the 2.99% Amex FX fee. I was wondering if they would reimburse me based on the Euro claim or what I paid in Sterling.

The next day ….

Less than 24 hours after submitting the additional documents, I received the following:

“Dear Customer,

We are pleased to inform you that your refund request has been approved.

According to the conditions of your insurance, we will proceed with the payment of the following amount:

• REIMBURSEMENT AMOUNT: 687,83 GBP

• PAYMENT DETAILS: Vehicle damage

The amount will be credited to the indicated bank account within approximately 7 days.

We appreciate the trust you have placed in our company, and we send you our warmest regards.

Refunds Department”

The full amount, including the Amex 2.99% FX fee, was being refunded. I also got 688 Membership Rewards points on top!

Conclusion

Whilst I had a number of complaints from readers about Europ Assistance after they took over the handling of American Express claims, my own experience was totally positive.

My claim was approved in under four days and I will be fully reimbursed.

I accept that this is the plainest of plain vanilla claims – Amex guarantees to pay for car rental damage, I had some car rental damage, Amex paid me – but I can only judge by my own experience and this one worked out well.

PS. I should clarify the exact small print of the Amex car rental cover. It will pay out £50,000 for theft or damage to the vehicle, and £500,000 ($1 million in the US) for damage to another person or their property.

It does NOT apply to commercial vehicles, motor homes, caravans and trailers. The Platinum cardholder must be named on the rental agreement. You are covered for rentals in the UK as well as abroad. Full terms are in the Platinum insurance policy document.

Comments (178)

  • No longer Entitled says:

    Can’t believe we have so many comments without anyone yet pointing out the Manufacturing Spend possibilities. Easy way to hit a SUB!

    • ColinThames says:

      I’m not sure if hitting a sub with your car would be covered, especially if the sub was underwater at the time! 😉

  • John says:

    “When they mention AMEX, does it have to be a UK-issued card, or can it be one from another country as well? I do have a UK-issued Amex Platinum, but I mainly use my US-issued Amex since it gives me more reward points and FX charge

    • JDB says:

      Where Amex uses the term “Account” or “Card Account” it says it must be UK issued. When defining “Card” it is silent on this!

      Like much of the policy it’s hopelessly poorly drafted and very out of date. A rewrite and update is badly needed as well as raising the level of cover for this supposedly flagship card to that of standalone Amex travel policies and the growing number of better than Amex Plat bank packaged policies.

  • BJ says:

    You seem to have quite a lot of travel insurance claims from my HFP memory 🙂 I’ve had 1 in 45 years. While it’s true I didn’t travel so much in the last ten years I did a huge amount before that. I never felt vomfortable with packaged insurance, even when I held platinum I still bought policies from LV or Direct Travel Insurance.

    • Rob says:

      I’ve done 3 Amex Plat car insurance claims in 20 years, plus a couple of medical bills for the kids when abroad. Never claimed for me or the Mrs AFAIK. Get a couple of kids and see how you get on …!

    • JDB says:

      I’m not sure many packaged policies are as deficient as Amex Plat but each one does have its own nuances that should be checked carefully. Some could be relied upon on their own, but Amex Plat isn’t one of them!

      • apbj says:

        I hadn’t realised the Amex Plat travel insurance was so deficient, not least because I’ve never had to claim (though have used the car hire cover once or twice).

        Is there an example of a good annual travel policy? £300 per person inconvenience limit seems very low in 2025!

        • ColinThames says:

          According to Which? the Barclays travel policy is highly rated.
          The only issue I’ve found is that the Barclays policy (underwritten by AXA I think) doesn’t cover business travel whereas I don’t think the Amex cover distinguishes between business or leisure.

          I had to claim for a lost car key recently (my own not a rental car’s) and Europ Assistance paid out, less the £50 excess. That said, their claims portal is dreadful. Looks to be designed by a teen with no understanding of a claims process – it won’t let you proceed unless you’ve uploaded a purchase receipt for the cost of the item. So I uploaded the receipt for buying the whole car. Seemed to work, but really!

          When Europ Assistance eventually asked for my bank details there was nowhere to add them other than the chat space. They also asked for my IBAN details which was weird.

          I gave feedback to Amex but have no confidence it’ll improve.

          I certainly wouldn’t depend on the hire car cover. I have a separate annual policy.

  • Praveen says:

    What document would be needed to cancel a holiday for Medical reason if GP isin’t going to give a letter for influenza which needs taking Tamiflu pills at home?

    • JDB says:

      You need a letter from a doctor stating that you weren’t fit to travel on the relevant dates and, if for Amex Plat which does allow postponement (a very good feature) , a date by which you could travel. Europ Assistance will gain access to your medical records so if you have previously been to the doctor for flu or similar, that might be considered a pre-existing condition.

    • MW says:

      You can also get a letter from an NHS GP for this. Our practice does them and charges something like £35 for a letter. Alternatively get an private GP appointment and you will pay roughly the same for the privilege (if online, in person is likely higher).

    • AnotherUser says:

      Did your GP refuse this? Amex platinum insurance have a specific form to complete, and my GP did this as private work for about £30. The reason for not travelling was being too unwell due to COVID, so GP was quite happy for us not to come in!

      Worth checking with your GP practice why they’re pushing back on this, if they are. They will likely be used to writing fit notes for people who can’t/shouldn’t come in. A certificate for medical insurance is private work (so the practice can choose not to take it on) but insisting on an in-person appointment to issue a certificate for flu seems like an odd policy

    • NFH says:

      In my recent claim for postponement, Europ Assistance reimbursed me for my GP’s £30 fee for writing the letter. The form was too onerous as it prevents the fields from being filled in. I added the GP’s invoice for £30 to my claim, which was paid without challenge.

  • Carl says:

    Was the claim made with the Business or Personal platinum card Rob? Are the T&C’s the same for the two cards?

  • George K says:

    I’m a big fan of the insurance package and have been in a position to claim a few times for travel delay, cancellation, purchase protection and medical expenses. Most cases required some sort of chasing, and the last one (emergency operation abroad) exposed the fact that the HUACA approach also applies to claims handlers (agent wanted UK GP note and proof that procedure was paid for with Amex – none of which are necessary for the global health coverage).

    The £300 travel delay cover is great when traveling with family/kids as that applies per person, per day, meaning most hotels would be very much in budget if you’re required to stay put for a few more days.

    Just to note that historically, when money was sent back to my Amex card for insurance claims, it did not claim back the Amex MR points awarded. It simply landed as a credit. My last claim was last summer.

    • JDB says:

      @George K – it’s not £300 per person per day. It is per person, but £300 is a total maximum sum, irrespective of the number of days. That £300 is also expected to cover everything – flights, food, extra transport, not just the hotel.

      • George K says:

        Unless this has changed since last summer, I’m afraid you’re mistaken. I suggest giving Europ a call. They’ll tell you for sure. But having called Axa myself, I can confirm the above. And trust me, our daily bill was over £300 and it was covered in full. I haven’t seen a change in the wording since the transition to Europ.

        You are, of course, correct on the fact that the £300 is supposed to cover everything, and not just accommodation. But in a fairly simple example where a family of three had an inbound flight cancellation whereby the first available flight was two days later, two nights in a £450pn hotel, another £100 in food and £50 for taxi, would still leave you £750 to play with.

        Which is what happened to us, almost exactly.

          • JDB says:

            I reread that before replying to your post and that’s not what it says. No mention of per day there or the summary table.

            Even if you were correct, the £300 is de minimis if, for instance, like the case posted earlier you miss a long haul flight (or even short haul) and need to buy replacement flights, extra accommodation, transport etc. It would only cover a fraction of your costs which is why other policies offer thousands not £300. Obviously, it’s fine if you think that’s adequate for travel disruption but people should at least be aware how low the cover is on that section vs almost any other policy and the rudks entailed.

          • George K says:

            No argument on whether the £300 (under any multiplier) is good enough to purchase replacement flights. It’s entirely inadequate and I’m with you on that. The example above works only when the airline rebooks you – which in some cases it could be days later, hence why the amount is not supposed to be a total per delay.

            I’ll give Europ a call later to clarify, as I have an almost real-life example to bring up (just recently returned from Canada but if our return flight were a couple of days later, we’d be ‘stuck’ as the past five inbounds have been cancelled due to the strikes).

            But under Axa, we certainly made use of the £300 on a per day, and per person basis.

          • JDB says:

            @George K – it will be interesting to see what Amex say, but if it’s not written in the policy it’s not anything that can be relied upon.

          • George K says:

            Just called Europ. They confirmed the per person per day policy. I asked them to send it to me, and they sent me the same thing we’ve got. Maybe you can give it a go. too.

          • Matt says:

            Good luck with that! Get it in writing. Had a fight about it previously and they said it’s total per person. Unless the underwriter deems it a major event (eg pandemic, Iceland volcano). Don’t see it anywhere per day. Maybe you got lucky previously. I find most Europ agents dont really know the detail.

  • JdeW says:

    I have an Amex Platinum charge card. Having reached the age of 70, I know that Amex travel insurance is no longer available to me. Do the car hire insurance cover benefits (excess damage waiver etc ) also drop off at 70?

    • JDB says:

      The policy only seems to reference medical benefits ceasing at 70 and oddly specifies “Age Limit for Medical Assistance and Expenses: All Cardmembers including Supplementary Cardmembers
      and their Families must be under 70 throughout the Trip to receive Medical Assistance and Expenses benefits.”

      By omission it would therefore seem other sections are covered but definitely something to check with Amex as ‘by omission’ isn’t really very satisfactory. Obviously need to check car hire conditions re age as well.

    • Andrea says:

      I asked AMEX the same question and I was told that the only benefit no longer available would be the medical travel insurance, all other travel benefits remain.

  • Daniel says:

    Worth noting it was literally impossible to submit a car hire claim online before as the AXA portal refused to work properly and would get stuck halfway through reporting.
    I gave up making a claim with them because Eversure’s online process actually worked and they’ve always paid out for me. At least with Europ the portal works!

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