Let’s Get Your Protection Up-To-Date
We’ve rounded up our insights on the top reasons to update your critical illness cover, income protection, and life insurance policies. Don’t forget, we are here every step of the way. Let’s dive in!
Critical Illness Cover
This pays a tax-free lump sum if you're diagnosed with a specified serious illness (such as cancer, heart attack, or stroke). The holiday connection is indirect but real:
- If you suffer a critical illness before or during a planned holiday, the lump sum gives you financial breathing room. You're not worrying about lost income while recovering.
- It could cover the cost of cancelled trips that travel insurance won't pay out on (for example, if your condition was pre-existing or the policy has exclusions).
- For longer-term recovery, it might fund recuperative travel.
- But it won't cover emergency medical treatment abroad.
What to watch: Critical illness policies only cover specific listed conditions. A broken leg on a ski slope, for example, wouldn't trigger a claim.
Income Protection
This replaces a portion of your income (typically 50–70%) if you're unable to work due to illness or injury. The holiday link is closer than you might think:
- If you're injured on holiday, a fall, a water sports accident, a road traffic incident, and it leaves you unable to work on your return, income protection kicks in once the deferred period ends.
- For the self-employed especially, knowing income is protected removes a significant source of stress around taking time off at all.
What to watch: Most policies have a deferred period (typically 4, 8, 13, or 26 weeks) before payments begin, so it doesn't help with immediate costs. That's travel insurance's job.
Life Insurance
This pays a lump sum or regular income to your dependants if you die. The holiday connection is sobering but worth considering:
- If you die abroad, life insurance provides for your family financially, independent of what travel insurance pays out for repatriation costs.
- Travel insurance typically covers the practical costs of bringing a body home, but life insurance covers the long-term financial impact on those left behind.
- If you have a mortgage, a life policy ensures your family aren't forced to sell the family home. This gives them stability rather than a financial crisis on top of grief.
What to watch: Life insurance pays out on death, not on injury or illness, so it's very much a protection for dependants rather than for you personally.
None of these three products replaces travel insurance. That should always be your first line of defence for anything holiday-related. But together they form a financial safety net that means a serious health event, whether it happens at home or abroad, doesn't derail your family's finances long after the holiday is over. Would you like to explore how these products interact with travel insurance, or how to prioritise which ones? Send us an email today, and we’ll book in a chat to go through all these details with you.
SPEAK TO AN ADVISER
Related
What actually is critical illness cover? It pays you a tax-free lump sum if you're diagnosed wit...
Read More >
The UK insurance market continues to evolve, shaped by technology, climate pressures and regulatory ...
Read More >
We all know getting regular health checkups is important. A diagnosis like cancer or heart disease c...
Read More >
We read something shocking recently. Recent figures show that around 40% of UK adults have less than...
Read More >
January is often when people take a step back and look at their finances with fresh eyes. Once the f...
Read More >
Did you know that nearly one in five adults in the UK who start looking into protection insurance do...
Read More >