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Amex Platinum insurance pays me again – this time for car hire

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Last August, I wrote a piece about how American Express Platinum travel insurance had paid out for a medical bill we incurred in Singapore.  This was the third time that Amex had paid me over the years – and on every occasion I had failed to follow the rules about what to do if you need medical attention.

I wrote in that article that:

“I can’t remember ever hearing of someone who was given a hard time by them over a claim”

Predictably, a number of Head for Points readers then came forward to say that, in fact, AXA had given them a very hard time processing a claim on their Platinum Card insurance.

Just after New Year, I needed to make a claim on the car hire part of the insurance.  To spoil the suspense, I will tell you that AXA / Amex agreed my claim very quickly and the full sum is now in my bank account.

First, some background.

Amex made some nasty changes to the insurance on the Platinum card in January 2012.  What was comprehensive, no-worries cover became a bit of a game, with flights and hotel required to have been paid on an Amex card in order to qualify for some of the smaller benefits.  The upper age limit dropped from 80 to 70 which meant that my Mum’s supplementary card on my account was now useless.

(It is worth noting that Amex never changed the insurance on the Business Platinum charge card.  This has an identical annual fee and very similar benefits.  If you value the travel insurance benefits of Platinum and have your own business, you may want to consider switching to Business Platinum.)

The car hire part of the insurance has no restrictions, however.  The insurance brochure is very clear – you can ignore anything that the car hire company tries to sell you.  Irrespective of how you pay for your rental, you are covered.

Just after New Year, we hired a car for three days to head out to a countryside hotel as the kids were not due back in school until 6th January.

When the car was returned, Hertz claimed that there was a scratch to the alloys on one of the wheels.  This was true.  Whether it was there originally or not is a different question – I do not check rental cars to that level of detail and the car was picked up from the windowless basement of a multi-storey carpark – but to be fair to Hertz this would not be atypical of the way I drive ….

On the other hand, this was the same branch of Hertz where an employee asked me for a £50 bribe or he would claim that some old damage on the car, not on the original report, was fresh.  He doesn’t work for Hertz any more.

I was fairly convinced Amex would pay so I dropped into ‘couldn’t give a ****’ mode.  This was quite amusing, at least for me, as the staff clearly expected me to put up a big fight and could not understand why I signed off everything they gave me without comment, negotiation, complaint or question.

Finding the online claim form for car insurance damage was tricky.  However, once I had tracked it down, it was easy to fill in the details.  The only annoying aspect was that Amex wanted a copy of my driving licence.  One trip to Ryman later and I had a little package for the post box consisting of the claim form (printed from the website), the Hertz bill, the rental agreement and my licence.

I didn’t hear anything for a couple of weeks, until I received an email saying that my claim (£103) would be met in full.  The money turned up about 10 days later.

Overall, the claims process was very smooth and went off without a glitch.  AXA accepted my claim without question (although it would be hard to deny a claim, given the wording of the policy) and paid promptly.

The moral of the story?  The Amex Platinum car hire insurance does what it promises it will do.  Which, in the world of insurance, is not always the case ….


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Comments (118)

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.

  • reader says:

    OT/ who bags the Avios for spend on the ba Amex supplementary card, the main cardholder or the supplementary card holder?

  • Mike says:

    Good to hear successful claims without much issue. I’ve had the opposite on 2 occasions. My Supp cardholders (parents in their late 60s and sister in law) had to make a claim each and on both occasions, Axa made life horrible. They paid out after 3 months of silence and then some communication and then more silence. And then asking for documents upon documents and verifications from airlines. I’m a Centurion IDC member and so would have thought that the claim experience should have been at least as good as any platinum member. Time to switch cards perhaps!

    • Lady London says:

      I actively avoid policies of any type underwritten by AXA. Anecdotal experience about difficulty with claims made me stop insuring with Amex as I regularly had, as soon as I saw their policy had transfered to them.

  • pointsarb says:

    +1 for Europcar rentals. Got an Audi A4 estate for £80 odd quid one way from MAN airport to Hertfordshire. I thought that was a pretty good deal so will be using them more from now on!

    Also, for gadget insurance (amongst several other things inc car breakdown and worldwide family travel insurance) bundled with a current account folks should take a look at the Nationwide flexplus account at £10/month. Its’ a relative bargain for what it includes?!

  • E1ghty says:

    I’m sorry to be an ‘off subjector’, but I’m hoping that community can offer some advice. I’m planning to fly to KL/SING this summer. I can fly with Lufthansa premium economy from FRA for the same as BA economy from Heathrow. My plan was to use a RFS to get to FRA. I just wondered whether people thought this was ill advised and too risky, or if not, what kind of a buffer time I should arrange between arrival and departure. Sorry again for disrupting the thread and thanks in advance.

    • harry says:

      fly both legs with Lufthansa to guarantee they’ll look after you if you miss connecting flight

      spend those Avios points another time

      otherwise take out insurance/ fly in night before/ fly in with 6 hours grace

  • IslandDweller says:

    Concur that the rental car cover from Amex is really very useful. One caveat, it is limited to vehicles costing below £50,000
    I was upgraded to a Mercedes S class (London City were short of cars and its all they had). Only afterwards did it occur to me that I was driving a vehicle costing more than my cover limit.
    Hertz and damage. I’ve generally found them fair, though my most recent rental was an exception. Picked up at LHR. Sheet said no damage, yet roof and rear pillar had multiple severe creases. I spotted this before leaving the pound as I picked up in daylight.

  • AdamB says:

    Car hire insurance claim worked fine for me. EuropCar charged me £1000 (+£27 admin) for a scratch due to it being a higher band vehicle. Amex/AXA queried the cost with EuropCar who eventually sent through the cost breakdown showing a cost of just over £600, so EuropCar gave me a partial refund and Amex/AXA covered the rest. Always worth asking for the cost breakdown to see if they’ve overcharged you.

  • Andy says:

    At the tail end of last year my macbook air developed a fault with the logic board.. it was 14months old and I didn’t have applecare, only the standard 1 yr apple warranty (US spec and purchase, not EU). A Nice bill for £500+ if I wanted apple to fix it.
    Aha…knowing how good the amex platinum insurance is, I remembered reading about the amex extended warranty back when I was applying a decade ago, so i figured I would be covered. After phoning amex, they told me that the green amex offers the extended warranty, but the platinum – despite the fee being several multiples of the green card fee – does not.
    Thankfully a polite letter to apple in Cork got it fixed free of charge.

  • WhoamI says:

    Is it still the case that the additional Plat coverage still applies if the retailer (usually a travel agent) doesn’t accept Amex?

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.