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Over 70s Holiday Insurance
Over 70s Holiday Insurance is standard UK travel cover priced for older travellers, with insurers that don't impose a low upper-age cap and that handle age-related medical screening sensibly. Most mainstream UK insurers will cover travellers into their 70s and many specialists cover into their 80s and 90s; price rises with age and with declared conditions but cover can still be comprehensive. Below: who needs it, what changes by age band, how medical screening works, typical costs, the right policy limits and the questions to ask before you buy.



Key facts
- What it is
- Travel insurance priced for Over 70s
- Mainstream upper age
- Most insurers cover into 70s, specialists into 80s/90s
- Medical cover
- At least £2m; £5m+ for USA, Canada, Caribbean, Far East
- Cost driver
- Age band and declared conditions
- UK authority
- MoneyHelper guide for older travellers

TL;DR
Age alone doesn't make travel insurance unaffordable - declared conditions do. Compare specialist insurers as well as mainstream ones, check the upper age limit on the policy summary, and look for at least £2 million medical cover (£5m+ for long-haul). Carry the insurer's 24/7 emergency line and your GHIC where it applies.
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Why insurers price travellers over 70 differently
Insurers use age as a proxy for medical claim risk. As travellers cross common age bands - 50, 65, 70, 75, 80 - the average cost of overseas medical claims rises, and premiums step up accordingly. The increases are not uniform: mainstream brands often stop quoting altogether at 70 or 75, while specialist over-70s travel insurers price competitively well into the 80s and beyond. That is why comparing both mainstream and specialist insurers matters for over-70 cover.
Practical advice for older travellers
Choose a higher excess if you're comfortable with the trade-off - it can meaningfully cut the premium. Pick an annual multi-trip policy if you travel more than twice a year. Declare every condition accurately, and ask the insurer to confirm cover in writing. For trips to high-cost destinations (USA, Canada, Caribbean, cruise) make sure the medical limit is at least £5–£10 million.
What holiday insurance typically covers
A typical UK holiday insurance policy combines several types of cover into a single product. The biggest single component - and the reason most people buy a policy - is emergency medical treatment overseas. Cancellation cover is usually the second largest line, followed by baggage, travel disruption and personal liability. The exact limits, excesses and small print are set by the policy wording, which always overrides any summary, including this one.
- Emergency medical treatment and hospital fees overseas, including ambulance and dental emergencies
- Repatriation back to the UK if you need to be flown home, including a medical escort where required
- Cancellation, curtailment and trip interruption for the reasons listed in the policy (illness, bereavement, jury service and similar)
- Travel disruption: missed departure, delay, and abandonment after long waits at the airport
- Personal belongings, baggage and money, with per-item, total and valuables sub-limits
- Personal liability for accidental injury or damage to others while you're abroad
- Legal expenses cover to pursue compensation in some circumstances
What holiday insurance does not cover
Most refused claims come down to exclusions that were always in the policy - not surprise small print. Understanding the common ones before you buy is the single most useful thing you can do.
- Pre-existing medical conditions that were not declared and accepted at the time you bought the policy
- Travel against UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) advice for the country or region
- Incidents while under the influence of alcohol or recreational drugs
- Activities not on the policy's covered list (motorbike hire, scuba diving below certain depths, climbing above certain altitudes, racing)
- Unattended baggage or valuables left in a public place, on a beach, or out of sight in a vehicle
- Known events at the time of booking - for example a strike or named storm that had already been publicly announced
- Routine, non-emergency or planned medical treatment overseas, including dental check-ups
What affects the cost of holiday insurance
Premium pricing is built around the insurer's assessment of risk and claim cost. The single biggest factors are typically the medical cover limit, the destination, the length of trip, the age of each traveller and any declared medical conditions. As a rough guide for healthy UK adults: a single-trip European policy can start from around £8–£20 per person; worldwide-excluding-USA tends to sit £15–£40; USA, Canada and the Caribbean (priced for very high medical costs) often £25–£70+. An annual multi-trip policy frequently pays for itself if you take more than two or three trips a year. Older travellers and those with declared medical conditions will see higher quotes - but specialist insurers usually offer much better value than mainstream brands in those cases.
- Age of each traveller (premiums step up at common ages: 50, 65, 70, 75, 80)
- Destination region: Europe, worldwide-excluding-USA/Canada/Caribbean, or worldwide-including
- Trip length and number of trips per year (single trip vs annual multi-trip)
- Declared medical conditions and current treatment
- Activity cover required (winter sports, cruise, golf, watersports, adventure)
- Excess you choose - a higher voluntary excess lowers the premium
- Optional extras: gadget cover, car hire excess waiver, business cover
How to compare holiday insurance properly
Comparing on price alone is the easiest mistake to make. A £6 policy with a £5,000 cancellation limit can cost you thousands more than a £22 policy with a £10,000 limit if your trip is cancelled. Use this checklist as the minimum you compare on every quote.
- Emergency medical cover: at least £2 million for Europe, £5 million+ for long-haul, £10 million+ for the USA
- Cancellation cover: must be at least the total cost of your trip (flights + accommodation + excursions, per traveller)
- Excess per claim - and per section (some policies charge an excess per medical condition)
- Activity list: confirm every planned activity is included, and at what grade
- Medical declaration: check how each insurer treats your conditions before you commit
- Cruise / winter-sports / gadget / golf extras only if you genuinely need them
- Claims rating: check independent customer reviews on Defaqto, Fairer Finance or Trustpilot
When to buy holiday insurance
Buy your policy on the day you book, not the week before you fly. Cancellation cover only protects events that happen after the policy starts and after the trip is booked. If you book a trip and only insure it a month before departure, anything that happens in between - a new diagnosis, a bereavement, jury service, an FCDO change - won't be covered for cancellation. Annual multi-trip policies start covering cancellation from the date the policy starts (or a trip is booked, depending on the wording).
How to claim - and what helps a claim succeed
Most rejected claims fall into a handful of categories: undeclared medical conditions, missing receipts, no police report for theft, or treatment that wasn't pre-authorised by the insurer's medical assistance team. A few simple habits avoid almost all of them.
- Always contact the insurer's 24-hour medical assistance line before non-emergency treatment overseas
- For theft or loss, report to the local police within 24 hours and get a written report or reference number
- Keep all receipts, booking confirmations and proof of value for items claimed
- Take photos of damaged items, baggage tags and any relevant documents at the time
- Submit your claim within the time limit in the policy (often 28 days from returning home)
- Be accurate and consistent in everything you tell the insurer - discrepancies cause delays
UK regulation and your consumer rights
Travel and holiday insurance sold in the UK is regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). That means insurers and intermediaries must treat customers fairly, give clear product information (the IPID - Insurance Product Information Document) and explain how to complain. If you can't resolve a complaint within eight weeks, you can escalate to the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) free of charge. Policies sold by FCA-authorised firms are also generally protected by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) if the insurer fails. Always check the firm is on the FCA register before you buy.
Related searches UK travellers ask about
People searching for over 70s holiday insurance also commonly look up the following terms. Each of these is covered in detail elsewhere on Holiday Insured:
- holiday insurance for over 70s
- holiday insurance for over 80s
- holiday insurance for over 60s
- holiday insurance over 60
- uk holiday cancellation insurance over 70
- holiday insurance for over 70
- over 55 holiday insurance
- holiday insurance over 50
- best holiday insurance for over 70s
- holiday insurance for over 50s
Policy checklist
- Medical cover limit at least £2 million (£5m+ for long-haul)
- Cancellation limit covers the full cost of your trip
- Excess you'd be willing to pay per claim
- Activity list includes everything you've planned
- Age limits and medical screening completed
- Cruise / winter sports / golf extras if needed
Insurance disclaimer: This page is general guidance, not regulated financial advice. Cover, limits, excesses and exclusions vary by insurer and policy. Always read the policy wording.
Affiliate disclosure: Holiday Insured may earn a commission when you click through to a provider and buy a policy. This does not affect what you pay or which policies we describe. Read our full affiliate disclosure.
Related guides
Frequently asked questions
Plain English answers to common holiday insurance questions.

Sources and further reading
Sources are independent UK authorities. Holiday Insured is not affiliated with any of the bodies listed. Read our editorial policy.
Written by
Aisha Patel, Consumer Finance Editor
Reviewed by
Josh T.
Last updated
7 June 2026
Read our editorial policy. This content is general guidance and not regulated financial or medical advice.