Hi all,
We were due to fly out to New York Sunday 29th October but as the superstorm hit our flights were cancelled by BA.
We were offered alternative flights but due to annual leave restrictions we had to cancel and accept a refund.
However my problem is our hotel - we booked directly with them but despite numerous emails they have still charged us full price for the room that we were unable to stay in and we've had no correspondence from them about it. They do have a no-cancellation policy and do charge for no-shows but I would have thought this circumstance was out of the ordinary - we didn't choose not to arrive!
My travel insurance doesn't cover 'natural disasters' - is there any way we can recover this money for the hotel from them or from the airline?
Many thanks
As your travel insurance doesn't cover for them, or trip interruption or whatever each company calls it, they aren't going to pay out.
This is why having the correct insurance cover for your needs is vital.
You will notice that officials have been very careful to call this a Superstorm rather than a Hurricane, since 'natural disaster' exclusions include Hurricanes, but not windstorms . Your insurance
should have covered this IMO...
My insurance does cover me for delays/cancellations caused by weather as long as they weren't known about at the time the trip was booked and/or the insurance was taken out. So my reading of my insurance is that if I'd booked to go to New York 3 months ago I'd be covered but if I booked to go at the beginning of the week Sandy struck and only took out the insurance at the same time, I probably wouldn't. However, I've never needed to put it to the test and there is still the chance that they would argue that anybody who travels to Cuba during the hurricane season has booked after the risk of delay and cancellation is already known.
SM
It depends entirely on the individual policy as to what they define as a natural disaster, if they call it that. Insurance sometimes still calls them 'acts of god' and that covers " superior forces" that are not man-made, avoidable, preventable, foreseen or anticipated and where nobody can be held responsible - except mother nature or God of course, and were a general exclusion on all policies, up till recent times. The facility exists with more and more companies to add cover for floods, earthquakes, storms, hurricanes, tsunamis, landslides etc. If a policy doesn't cover why should they pay out?
Sunaddict wrote:It depends entirely on the individual policy as to what they define as a natural disaster, if they call it that. Insurance sometimes still calls them 'acts of god' and that covers " superior forces" that are not man-made, avoidable, preventable, foreseen or anticipated and where nobody can be held responsible - except mother nature or God of course, and were a general exclusion on all policies, up till recent times. The facility exists with more and more companies to add cover for floods, earthquakes, storms, hurricanes, tsunamis, landslides etc. If a policy doesn't cover why should they pay out?
I'm in the US and Insurance companies here can not use the Hurricane/force of nature exclusion on this storm, that's why weather people have been so careful to classify it as a 'superstorm' - so people can claim
for their losses. Sorry if I gave the wrong information, I thought that it would apply to this case too...
emdia43 wrote:Sunaddict wrote:It depends entirely on the individual policy as to what they define as a natural disaster, if they call it that. Insurance sometimes still calls them 'acts of god' and that covers " superior forces" that are not man-made, avoidable, preventable, foreseen or anticipated and where nobody can be held responsible - except mother nature or God of course, and were a general exclusion on all policies, up till recent times. The facility exists with more and more companies to add cover for floods, earthquakes, storms, hurricanes, tsunamis, landslides etc. If a policy doesn't cover why should they pay out?
I'm in the US and Insurance companies here can not use the Hurricane/force of nature exclusion on this storm, that's why weather people have been so careful to classify it as a 'superstorm' - so people can claim
for their losses. Sorry if I gave the wrong information, I thought that it would apply to this case too...
No problem. Insurance is a minefield at the best of times, and varies so much from country to country.
Our hotel could have charge us for one nights stay due to their terms and conditions but they never did. But i suppose in that instance the hotel would have been full due to the current guests being snowed in and having to stay extra nights. But by rights the hotel could have charged.
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