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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)

  • Dean_K says:

    I’ve finally decided to cancel my Platinum card. The trigger was looking at a standalone annual policy with Wanda for ~£270 and realising it gives me proper cover for the way I travel.

    With Platinum, most of my long-haul trips are Avios redemptions and cruises are in USD, so the big costs are never actually charged to the card. That means curtailment and cancellation cover doesn’t apply, which makes the insurance far less valuable than it looks on paper.

    Once I factored that in, paying £650 a year for a card whose insurance barely covers me just didn’t make sense any more. The other benefits don’t come close to making the card worthwhile.

  • Tim says:

    I’m not entirely sure a claims company or insurer can credit a Card Account. Sure if a merchant debits a card, they can re-credit it with up to the same amount as they debited, but no more.

  • aceman says:

    a timely article. I’m leaving on an open ended trip soon, i realise that the trips are covered for 90 days. I’m wondering if i’m covered for those first 90 days without a return ticket (at which point i buy another policy), or if something happens on day 43 for example they’d deny a claim because i dont have a ticket back

    • NFH says:

      It’s not a condition of the insurance to have a return ticket. You might not know your return travel date until nearer the time, and you might be waiting for tickets to become cheaper or available nearer the time. I have done this with Avios bookings in the past.

    • TJones says:

      As far as I’m aware, if your trip is longer than 90 days then usually you’re not covered for any of it and you can’t extend it by buying another policy during the trip.

      • ADS says:

        I assume that if they (any insurer) can find an excuse to refuse a payment – they will !

        Probably worth investing in a stand alone style annual long duration insurance product.

    • Dubious says:

      In the event of a claim you would need to provide evidence that your trip was no more than 90 days.

      That part of the trip would need to be booked before the incident.

  • Richard Dwight says:

    Would this be covered. We had a flight cancelled by AA for weather last week. JFK to MCO. The next flight they could get us on was 48 hours later. We decided to pay for flights JFK to TPA with JetBlue the same evening to ensure we got to our accommodation. I have a refund from AA, but about £600 out of pocket, plus taxi from TPA. The plat insurance talks about travel inconvenience and accommodation, but does it cover new flights? Thanks.

    • Matt says:

      Yes, the travel inconvenience part talks about accommodation , food and additional travel costs–see ***part*** below.. But will only cover £300 per person covered.

      1.6 of T&Cs: You will be reimbursed up to £150 per person for refreshment costs, or up to £300 per person (including
      £150 for refreshments) for ***additional travel*** and accommodation costs incurred prior to actual departure.
      on Your Trip

  • NicktheGreek says:

    I’m on my third claim this year. One being a luggage mishandling that straddled into 2025 by the time it was settled (in shortfall) by the airline, one being device damaged, and just this weekend an A&E visit in Mallorca with my daughter. The first two were settled, albeit slightly cumbersome.

    Today, stepping out of A&E and calling Amex I was told Insurance couldn’t assist until 9am Monday UK time, which doesn’t feel super helpful if needing medical help or coverage of fees out of hours. Fortunately in lieu of the insurers being responsive we could discharge and sort it out later ( with less than €1000 paid). I’m not sure how helpful this would all be in a substantial medical crisis, and surely needs to be improved if they advertise themselves in the way they do. Fortunately we had the cash to cover the expenses in the meantime. Let’s see how the claim goes…

  • Jens says:

    Hi,
    There seems to be a LOT of uncertainty about what is covered, what need to be paid for with an AMEX and/or a Platinum card.
    My suggestion is an article spelling this out obviously backed up by AMEX feedback/confirmation. This especially in lue of a number of Platinum benefits going away, such as Harvey Nic’s, and justifying the annual card expense!

    • Rob says:

      We are not licenced to ‘advise’ on insurance products so we are restricted in what we can say, frustratingly. There is no such thing as ‘Amex feedback / confirmation’ though – the policy document is a legal contract with you and what it says is what happens.

      • Cheyney says:

        Reading through the comments, I wonder if it would be worth doing a revised “is the platinum card worth it” article. As someone with BA Gold and who rarely flies with other airlines, and now that they stopped the Harvey Nichols £100 p/y, I’m debating cancelling – looks like this insurance article has others thinking the same!

      • apbj says:

        No licence required to state the facts! A summary of the key benefits and potential drawbacks would be helpful.

        A ‘five of the best worldwide annual policies’ would be helpful too… Which? tends to be a bit basic on this and too focussed on the single trip market.

        • Rob says:

          You’re missing the point here.

          1 – the ‘best’ policy is one that pays up without a fight. Many insurers gold plate their policy on the basis that they never settle a claim without a legal fight. What use is it recommending those? Look at MSE where it ranks based on reader claim feedback.

          2 – too many people are obsessed by high limits (eg £5m of medical cover vs £1m) when the facts show that the highest claim recorded in the last decade is usually a fraction of these caps

          3 – any form of ranking is, in itself, a recommendation which we are not legally allowed to give

          Policy A is not better than Policy B if Policy B is more likely to pay up, and Policy X is not better than Policy Y just because it has higher claim limits, since it is usually virtually impossible to hit those limits.

  • Saltrams says:

    After some years of ever increasing costs for annual travel insurance from LV (blame the 70+ OH with high blood pressure and a “big C” in the past) I researched Nationwide’s FlexPlus a/c with packaged Aviva insurance (saw it on MSE forum). I’ve been stunned by the improvement: LV charge for w/w except US annual policy last hit £1300 but we now pay £18 pm plus the excess payment for the OH’s conditions…£30!! And that includes USA, it’s genuinely w/w.
    I haven’t had to claim, which will be the real test but the policy price is excellent.

  • Lauren says:

    Interesting… Had my first ever claim rejected this month since they changed providers. nEVER had any issues with any claims before that over 15 years.

    I will be escalating this to management

    • Paul says:

      Good luck with that. I think we’d all be interested in you experience of raising a complaint and their complaint handling, irrespective of the final out come

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