Most people don’t read their insurance policy. Not properly, anyway.
We skim it. We sign it. We file it away. And we carry on assuming that if something goes wrong… we’re covered.
Most of the time, that’s true.
Until it isn’t.
Recently, a few clients have asked a simple question:
“What happens if my travel plans are disrupted because of conflict somewhere else in the world?”
It’s a fair question.
You’ve booked your trip. You’ve paid upfront. You’ve taken out travel insurance for peace of mind. And then something completely outside your control happens—flights are cancelled, routes change, uncertainty creeps in.
Surely that’s exactly what insurance is for? Not always.
Most travel policies exclude war—and anything linked to it.
Even if you’re not travelling anywhere near a conflict zone, the knock-on effects can still disrupt your journey… without triggering cover.
This isn’t new. It’s been in policy wordings for years.
But for a long time, it didn’t feel relevant.
Now it does.
And it’s not just travel.
War exclusions exist across most insurance policies—commercial, domestic, and specialist.
They’ve always been there. We’ve just never really had to think about them.
At the same time, global events are starting to show up in other ways:
- Fuel prices increase.
- Supply chains slow down.
- Parts become harder to source.
- Repairs take longer.
- Costs rise.
You might not notice it immediately… but it affects how claims are processed, how long things take, and sometimes what things cost.
Closer to home, we’re also seeing pressure in different ways:
- Road conditions.
- Ageing infrastructure.
- Water-related issues.
These aren’t dramatic headline events— but they’re happening more often, and they do impact day-to-day risk.
So what does this mean for you?
It means your cover is still doing what it was designed to do.
But the world around it has changed. And sometimes, the gap isn’t in the policy…
It’s in the expectation.
A simple takeaway:
Don’t wait for a claim to find out what your policy does—or doesn’t—cover.
Ask the questions. Understand the boundaries. Have the conversation before you need the answer.
Insurance has always been about preparing for the unexpected.
The difference now… is that the unexpected no longer feels unexpected.
