Best travel insurance 2023 – Which?

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How do you find the best travel insurance?

The best travel insurance can’t stop things going wrong on holiday, but it can prevent it having a potentially huge impact on your finances.

We’ve rated hundreds of policies, scrutinising more than 60 areas of cover in each one. We’ve scoured information on medical expenses, Covid cover, flight cancellation, compulsory excesses and many other factors to bring you our ratings on the top holiday insurance policies.

Here we reveal the policies that did best in our analysis.

Please note that the information in this article is for information purposes only and does not constitute advice. Please refer to the particular terms and conditions of an insurer before committing to any financial products.

Best travel insurance: our top rated travel insurers

The ‘policy score’ reflects how well the policy compared overall, the higher it is, the more comprehensive the cover. We then make an adjustment, taking into account factors like medical expenses cover, cancellation cover and the compulsory excesses on the policy.

In our tables that follow, you can see the full results of our survey findings, but to make it easier, we’ve picked out our top rated insurers and what we liked about each – read the full reviews of each provider by clicking on the links. 

NFU Mutual

  • Scored 81% in our analysis – compared with the average of 64%. 

We liked: NFU Mutual was one of a minority of providers that will pay out if your holiday supplier or airline goes bankrupt. NFU Mutual was also one of the best travel insurance companies when it came to handling claims, paying out more often than the industry average according to the latest data from the  Financial Conduct Authority. It is one of only two providers that applies its excess (£50) once per claim – which could save hundreds if you’re travelling as part of a group. 

NFU Mutual’s policies come as add-ons to its Home and Lifestyle and Bespoke home insurance products. 

  • Read our full NFU Mutual review.

All Clear, Avanti & Insure and Go

  • All Clear’s Platinum policy scored 79%, Avanti’s Deluxe policy scored 78% and Insure and Go’s Black policy scored 77%

We liked: all three are medical specialist travel insurers and cover outbound, connecting and returning flights that you’ve missed because of delays. Missed flights cover was available in more than 93% of policies we checked – but for the full round trip in only 53% of policies..

Unity Travel, Sainsbury’s Bank and Avion

  • Unity Travel scored 77% for its highest-scoring policy, Sainsbury’s Bank scored 75% and Avion scored 74%

We liked: Unity Travel, Sainsbury’s Bank and Avion were, like NFU Mutual, among those providers offering bankruptcy cover for airlines and holiday firms. 

Unity Travel offers high levels of cover for lost or stolen baggage at £3,000 in total – with high levels of cover (£600) for expenses replacing lost or stolen passports of driving licences.

Sainsbury’s Bank comes with no excesses, an unlimited medical expenses cover and it scored top marks for its generous payout on hospital-related costs, £2,000. There was a pitfall to the policy’s cancellation cover around advice changes from the Foreign, Commonwealth Department Office. None of the events we asked about (war, terrorism, natural disasters or civil unrest) are covered.

Avion’s Gold policy offers very high amounts of cancellation cover (up to £12,500 per person, per claim) – worth considering if you’ve booked a very expensive trip. It was also one of the few policies we analysed to include end supplier failure – which pays out if your travel company or airline goes bankrupt.

Best travel insurance: insurers and policies compared

We’ve put the full details of our findings in the tables below – to access each table, use the ‘Select a table’ dropdown below.

  • The ‘most comprehensive’ table show the top 10 best policies overall in our analysis. Here, we’ve filtered out providers with a poorer-than-average record of paying claims.
  • The other tables show the top-scoring policy from every provider we’ve rated, without filtering. Of all policies reviewed, scores ranged from 83% to 29%.

We’ve also written comprehensive reviews of the best 16 insurers overall – just click on the links in the table to read them (although our full coverage is reserved for Which? members.

Most comprehensive travel policies

Table note: All ratings are for policies available to new customers, and the details were gathered in a survey carried out in April 2023. The information should be considered correct to then. We will next update our policy scores in June 2023. See our full methodology below.

For policies outside our ‘most comprehensive’ list, we’ve only included the provider’s best scoring policy. However, they might offer other policies with fewer features, often at a lower price. We’ve still scored these policies. You can find the scores in our individual travel insurer reviews, which cover the biggest and best brands.

If a brand isn’t listed in the table it means it didn’t take part in our survey this year and hasn’t been reviewed.

Specialist travel insurance: our top picks

Looking for our reviews of specialist travel insurance? Read on to find out more:

How to compare travel insurance companies

1. Check our tables and reviews

Our experts have assigned each travel insurance policy a policy score, reflecting how comprehensive, overall, the cover is.

It’s important to remember, however, that travel insurance is complex – so even providers with high policy scores won’t necessarily cover everything you’re looking for. For a more detailed look at some of the larger and higher-scoring providers, see our individual travel insurer reviews.

2. Get a quote

While looking at our reviews, you can get a quote for travel insurance using the service provided by Confused.com.

You might be able to save by using multiple comparison sites. 

3. Check the T&Cs

Before you buy, check the policy wording to make sure you understand what your policy covers, and what it doesn’t.

If there are specific reasons you’ve bought the cover, check these sections to make sure they meet your expectations. Also check the policy’s general exclusions and conditions. If anything in the policy is unclear, contact the insurer.

Finally, check what protection your holiday provider offers, because if something goes wrong, you might need to seek compensation from it first before your insurer will accept your claim.

Check you’re getting a great deal and search for a new travel insurance policy using the service provided by Confused.com. Get a quote now

How much does travel insurance cost?

What you’ll pay for travel insurance varies hugely by where you’re going and for how long.

Take these average quotes, collected for us by Confused.com, for a couple of 50-years olds with a joint policy:

Source: Confused.com, based on average quotes from 1 January 2023 to 20 November 2023

These are averages, and so you’re likely to pay:

  • Less if just buying cover for yourself
  • Less if you’re younger than 50, or more if you’re older than 50
  • More if you have a pre-existing medical condition

Whatever your situation, chances are you can reduce costs by comparing travel insurance. An annual policy may work out cheaper if you travel multiple times a year.

Frequently asked travel insurance questions

How we analyse travel insurance

The policy score rates how comprehensive the cover is – the higher the better.

Claims performance, service and price aren’t taken into account – just the levels of cover.

In April 2023, we surveyed 56 travel insurance companies about their levels of cover and analysed 161 of their policies.

We rated 67 key elements of each policy. The ‘policy score’ reflects how well the policy did overall. The higher it is, the more comprehensive the cover.

Initially, we score all of the product elements out of five, reflecting how competitive each provider is in that area compared with other insurers. 

Then, based on our assessment of which elements are more or less important for customers choosing and using policies, we adjust the impact that each element has on the overall score. Among the highest-weighted elements are medical expenses cover, cancellation cover and the compulsory excesses on the policy.  

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