Warks
Established Member
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2003
- Posts
- 2,520
- Qantas
- LT Silver
- Virgin
- Platinum
I've been using my Velocity Amex Platinum card for a decade or more to pay for airfares, hotels and car rental. I've never taken additional excess insurance due to the fact that I assumed the card covered me. Well I've discovered that it doesn't cover it, at all, according to them.
Driving a car in Europe last month and I managed to scrape a wheel on a kerb. It wasn't anything major but the car was relatively new and was a Merc so had expensive wheels. At the time I thought it could be the full 1200 euro excess. I got the claim a week or so later (didn't report it at drop-off as it was unattended) and it came (surprisingly) to about 300 euros. I lodged my claim with Amex, which uses Chubb, paid the rental car company by the due date and waited.
A couple of weeks later I get the email dismissing my claim, after being assured by many people that Amex are really good and almost always pay out.
This was the wording:
"After careful review of the information provided to us, we regret to advise that
your policy is unable to respond to this claim under the American Express
Velocity Platinum Card. Whilst we sympathise with your situation, the American
Express Velocity Platinum Card Insurance does not have a benefit for Loss
Damage Waiver Cover, which would be required for this type of claim.
Please be advised we have also reviewed your claim under Section G – Personal
Liability Cover, however, the policy carries an exclusion for any cost arising from
or relating to mechanically propelled vehicles, and as such the policy is unable to
respond."
It's not a million dollars I'm out but this is rather irritating as it seems they talk a big game regarding insurance but in the end offer zero. I regularly rent vehicles in Australia and it seems I've been living in a fool's paradise all these years. Do I need to take out a domestic travel insurance policy?
Driving a car in Europe last month and I managed to scrape a wheel on a kerb. It wasn't anything major but the car was relatively new and was a Merc so had expensive wheels. At the time I thought it could be the full 1200 euro excess. I got the claim a week or so later (didn't report it at drop-off as it was unattended) and it came (surprisingly) to about 300 euros. I lodged my claim with Amex, which uses Chubb, paid the rental car company by the due date and waited.
A couple of weeks later I get the email dismissing my claim, after being assured by many people that Amex are really good and almost always pay out.
This was the wording:
"After careful review of the information provided to us, we regret to advise that
your policy is unable to respond to this claim under the American Express
Velocity Platinum Card. Whilst we sympathise with your situation, the American
Express Velocity Platinum Card Insurance does not have a benefit for Loss
Damage Waiver Cover, which would be required for this type of claim.
Please be advised we have also reviewed your claim under Section G – Personal
Liability Cover, however, the policy carries an exclusion for any cost arising from
or relating to mechanically propelled vehicles, and as such the policy is unable to
respond."
It's not a million dollars I'm out but this is rather irritating as it seems they talk a big game regarding insurance but in the end offer zero. I regularly rent vehicles in Australia and it seems I've been living in a fool's paradise all these years. Do I need to take out a domestic travel insurance policy?