MONTREAL — Canadians looking to get away for spring break now have a more robust range of travel insurance options.
The federal government announced last week it will roll back testing and quarantine restrictions effective Monday and will also lift its blanket advisory against trips abroad.
Although Canada’s requirement for pre-departure COVID-19 molecular testing will end on that date, potentially cheaper and easier-to-access rapid antigen tests will be mandatory. Unvaccinated children under 12 will also no longer need to self-isolate upon return to the country.
The change means an insured traveller can get full coverage if they suffer a medical emergency on foreign soil due to COVID-19, as companies add the virus to their polices again after removing it when Ottawa rolled out its travel warning in mid-December.
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"Now there are no riders, no caps on it," said Marty Firestone, president of Toronto-based insurance broker Travel Secure.
If tourists test positive they willxjmtzyw still have to wait 10 days before returning to Canada, a cost they can hedge with trip interruption coverage that covers accommodations, airfare costs and other expenses.
However, Firestone says insurers continue to exclude pandemics from their trip cancellation coverage, meaning payments for resort packages or short-term rentals could be lost should border closures resume.
"You still won’t be able to claim if your reason for not going is COVID-related," he said, adding that insurance companies may leave out global epidemics indefinitely.
"I think they’re all going to cover their behinds a bit here now and never get into that position again … You are never going to be covered for cancelling a trip because of a pandemic anymore," Firestone predicted.
Airlines sell various forms of trip cancellation coverage if you purchase a package from them.
Airlines and travel agents say bookings are on the rise again as the Omicron-fuelled surge in cases recedes and Canadians locked at home for much of the past two years clamber for escape to warmer weather.
Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau said Friday reservations were ticking upward over the past month. Bookings at travel agencies Flight Centre and Tripcentral.ca rose to between 40 and 50 per cent of pre-pandemic levels in the days leading up to last week’s federal announcement, and towered over numbers from the same time last year, when Caribbean flights were halted.
With COVID-19-related cancellations still unviable as a claim, Firestone recommended that groups putting down large deposits hash out a refund agreement with the "end user" — resorts, rental companies, tour operators.
Cruise travel also remains at a Level 4 advisory as the government warns citizens to "avoid all cruises. The notice affects insurance coverage, with days quarantining in one’s cabin — and paying for it — likely unclaimable, Firestone said.
Those relying on their credit cards, particularly older clients, should check the fine print for details like the length of time they’re covered while overseas.
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A passenger waits beside his luggage at the departure terminal at Pearson International Airport in Toronto, Friday, May 24, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young