AEfx
Well-Known Member
I just booked a package with the WDTC. This is very rare for me, as I can always do better on my own booking things. But when free dining comes calling...all bets are off. ![Smile :) :)](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f642.png)
When I was booking it earlier this week (although I've been dozens of times I've probably only booked 1 or 2 packages before), I had forgotten about the "insurance" until the end. I thought about it for a bit, but once I checked it all out I simply could not figure out what use it would be, especially at the price.
This isn't a "I want to hate on travel insurance" thread, LOL, but I honestly couldn't figure out any benefit to it whatsoever in anything but extremely narrow circumstances, and sometimes it would even cost you MORE to have it than if you didn't. So I'm honestly curious if I am missing something here.
Let's start with the figures - I booked a package around $3000. The price of the insurance was around $200 (some odd number like $202). The price was about 10% of the base cost of the package (I added several things, like a car, better tickets, etc.), but I don't know if that's how they calculate it or if it's a standard number.
Strike One for me was that the insurance is through a 3rd party I had never heard of. They may be a well-known company, but I don't do a lot of insurance besides the basics (health/home/car) so I don't know. But that just made me say, "Whoa...slow down now" right off the bat.
Then I started to look at what you get for the $200. The entire "pre-trip" portion of the insurance seems utterly useless, and might even cost you more than if you didn't buy it in the first place because Disney's cancellation policy is so amazing to begin with. Let's look at the numbers:
WITHOUT INSURANCE:
I have a $3,000 vacation that I put a $200 deposit on. The balance is due 45 days before I arrive.
If I cancel before the 45 days is here, I get a full refund (I spent $200, I get $200).
If I cancel after the 45 days, but before the arrival date, even after I paid in full, I get the entire thing back except for the $200 deposit. RESULT - Spent $3000, and got a $2800 refund.
WITH INSURANCE:
I have a $3000 vacation that I put down a $200 deposit on and pay $200 at the time of booking for insurance ($400 bucks). The balance is due 45 days before I arrive.
If I cancel before the 45 days, I get $200 back (my deposit). The Insurance premium is non-refundable, so I am out that $200. So I spend $400, get $200, which puts me at -$200.
If I cancel after the 45 days, but before arrival date (after I've paid in full), I would have spent $3200 ($3000 trip + $200 insurance). I would get back $2800, because they keep the $200 deposit, and my $200 insurance is non-refundable. This puts me at $-400.
So, unless I'm really missing something here, it's going to cost me between $200 and $400 more to cancel WITH the insurance than without. Of course, that's just for canceling for any reason at all.
If one of the very limited categories of covered events happens to me (involuntarily lose my job through no fault of my own - basically if you are laid off, or if there is a major health problem), then if I cancel at least 45 days out I *still* am out $200 for the insurance, as Disney would have given me my deposit money back in full anyway. If one of those covered reasons happens less than 45 days before the trip, after I've paid in full, then I'd get $3000 back, and...yet again, still be out $200 for the insurance, when if I hadn't had the insurance I would have only paid $3000 in the first place, gotten $2800 back, and still been out the same...drumroll please...$200, since they keep the deposit in that case.
Please tell me if I am somehow being dense here - but no matter what the reason is, if you cancel before your arrival date, you are out an extra $200-400 from what you would have lost if you hadn't had the insurance at all. That's kind of...crazy. And Strike Two.
So then you have the "during trip" part of the insurance. This covers things like major health issues, personal belongings, and weather (hurricanes, I guess). Let's look at each of those.
HEALTH ISSUES - If I am already at, or traveling to, WDW, there are very few health issues that would keep us from staying. I have my own health insurance who would cover me, so I don't need anything like that, so it would just be a partial refund for an unfinished trip.
It literally would have to be a severed limb or severe head injury that left someone in a catatonic state for us to need to leave. Even if it was a broken arm or leg, we'd still stay. And if someone is going to have a severed limb, to be honest, it's probably going to happen on a Disney ride if it's going to happen, so if it did (as we would never stand up or do something stupid on a ride), it would most likely be their fault so I don't think we'd have to worry about that refund. ;
If a someone at home died, well...this is gonna sound awful...but if someone actually died, not much we can do. We may leave early, but unless it was a very close relative when we'd obviously feel the need to leave right then, if the person has passed away was truly close to us I think they'd want us to finish our trip because they know how much we love it. If a family member took terribly ill, they needed us and it was so bad they might not make it until we get back, of course we'd be on the first flight and whatever portion of the vacation was left we'd just deal with - people are much more important than a partial refund of a vacation.
PERSONAL BELONGINGS : This one is easy. My home owners insurance would cover anything major, and we don't bring $10,000 diamond rings with us. The most expensive single item is probably a $200 camera anyway, but since I already have insurance it's useless.
WEATHER: I bet this is why a lot of people bite. They are terrified of hurricanes. Here's how I see it - the only way it would stop our trip is if it was happening the day we were scheduled to get there (BTW, I live in New England, we gets snow and blizzards here, but nothing really destructive like real hurricanes or quakes, etc.,, so any weather would be an Orlando issue). If the airport was closed the day we were supposed to fly in, we would not cancel the trip - we'd just call Disney, let them know we'd be missing the first day, and get the next flight down we could.
If it happens while we are there, we aren't going anywhere - if you are going to be in a hurricane, WDW is the safest place to be, it would likely send a lot of crowds away, and the worst that has ever happened is the parks are closed for a day. If it happens on the day we are supposed to go and the airport is closed, well, trip is already over, nothing to insure and I'm sure Disney isn't going to kick us out in the storm (especially since they won't have anyone incoming either). STRIKE THREE! YER OUT!
So...that's it. I cannot figure out one way that insurance would be of any use to us, or most people. It costs you more if you cancel WITH the insurance than without if it's before you go, if you have health and home owner's insurance that portion is useless to you, and if there is a hurricane, unless you chicken out and decide not to go at all you can still have most of your vacation.
What am I missing here???
![Smile :) :)](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f642.png)
When I was booking it earlier this week (although I've been dozens of times I've probably only booked 1 or 2 packages before), I had forgotten about the "insurance" until the end. I thought about it for a bit, but once I checked it all out I simply could not figure out what use it would be, especially at the price.
This isn't a "I want to hate on travel insurance" thread, LOL, but I honestly couldn't figure out any benefit to it whatsoever in anything but extremely narrow circumstances, and sometimes it would even cost you MORE to have it than if you didn't. So I'm honestly curious if I am missing something here.
Let's start with the figures - I booked a package around $3000. The price of the insurance was around $200 (some odd number like $202). The price was about 10% of the base cost of the package (I added several things, like a car, better tickets, etc.), but I don't know if that's how they calculate it or if it's a standard number.
Strike One for me was that the insurance is through a 3rd party I had never heard of. They may be a well-known company, but I don't do a lot of insurance besides the basics (health/home/car) so I don't know. But that just made me say, "Whoa...slow down now" right off the bat.
Then I started to look at what you get for the $200. The entire "pre-trip" portion of the insurance seems utterly useless, and might even cost you more than if you didn't buy it in the first place because Disney's cancellation policy is so amazing to begin with. Let's look at the numbers:
WITHOUT INSURANCE:
I have a $3,000 vacation that I put a $200 deposit on. The balance is due 45 days before I arrive.
If I cancel before the 45 days is here, I get a full refund (I spent $200, I get $200).
If I cancel after the 45 days, but before the arrival date, even after I paid in full, I get the entire thing back except for the $200 deposit. RESULT - Spent $3000, and got a $2800 refund.
WITH INSURANCE:
I have a $3000 vacation that I put down a $200 deposit on and pay $200 at the time of booking for insurance ($400 bucks). The balance is due 45 days before I arrive.
If I cancel before the 45 days, I get $200 back (my deposit). The Insurance premium is non-refundable, so I am out that $200. So I spend $400, get $200, which puts me at -$200.
If I cancel after the 45 days, but before arrival date (after I've paid in full), I would have spent $3200 ($3000 trip + $200 insurance). I would get back $2800, because they keep the $200 deposit, and my $200 insurance is non-refundable. This puts me at $-400.
So, unless I'm really missing something here, it's going to cost me between $200 and $400 more to cancel WITH the insurance than without. Of course, that's just for canceling for any reason at all.
If one of the very limited categories of covered events happens to me (involuntarily lose my job through no fault of my own - basically if you are laid off, or if there is a major health problem), then if I cancel at least 45 days out I *still* am out $200 for the insurance, as Disney would have given me my deposit money back in full anyway. If one of those covered reasons happens less than 45 days before the trip, after I've paid in full, then I'd get $3000 back, and...yet again, still be out $200 for the insurance, when if I hadn't had the insurance I would have only paid $3000 in the first place, gotten $2800 back, and still been out the same...drumroll please...$200, since they keep the deposit in that case.
Please tell me if I am somehow being dense here - but no matter what the reason is, if you cancel before your arrival date, you are out an extra $200-400 from what you would have lost if you hadn't had the insurance at all. That's kind of...crazy. And Strike Two.
So then you have the "during trip" part of the insurance. This covers things like major health issues, personal belongings, and weather (hurricanes, I guess). Let's look at each of those.
HEALTH ISSUES - If I am already at, or traveling to, WDW, there are very few health issues that would keep us from staying. I have my own health insurance who would cover me, so I don't need anything like that, so it would just be a partial refund for an unfinished trip.
It literally would have to be a severed limb or severe head injury that left someone in a catatonic state for us to need to leave. Even if it was a broken arm or leg, we'd still stay. And if someone is going to have a severed limb, to be honest, it's probably going to happen on a Disney ride if it's going to happen, so if it did (as we would never stand up or do something stupid on a ride), it would most likely be their fault so I don't think we'd have to worry about that refund. ;
If a someone at home died, well...this is gonna sound awful...but if someone actually died, not much we can do. We may leave early, but unless it was a very close relative when we'd obviously feel the need to leave right then, if the person has passed away was truly close to us I think they'd want us to finish our trip because they know how much we love it. If a family member took terribly ill, they needed us and it was so bad they might not make it until we get back, of course we'd be on the first flight and whatever portion of the vacation was left we'd just deal with - people are much more important than a partial refund of a vacation.
PERSONAL BELONGINGS : This one is easy. My home owners insurance would cover anything major, and we don't bring $10,000 diamond rings with us. The most expensive single item is probably a $200 camera anyway, but since I already have insurance it's useless.
WEATHER: I bet this is why a lot of people bite. They are terrified of hurricanes. Here's how I see it - the only way it would stop our trip is if it was happening the day we were scheduled to get there (BTW, I live in New England, we gets snow and blizzards here, but nothing really destructive like real hurricanes or quakes, etc.,, so any weather would be an Orlando issue). If the airport was closed the day we were supposed to fly in, we would not cancel the trip - we'd just call Disney, let them know we'd be missing the first day, and get the next flight down we could.
If it happens while we are there, we aren't going anywhere - if you are going to be in a hurricane, WDW is the safest place to be, it would likely send a lot of crowds away, and the worst that has ever happened is the parks are closed for a day. If it happens on the day we are supposed to go and the airport is closed, well, trip is already over, nothing to insure and I'm sure Disney isn't going to kick us out in the storm (especially since they won't have anyone incoming either). STRIKE THREE! YER OUT!
So...that's it. I cannot figure out one way that insurance would be of any use to us, or most people. It costs you more if you cancel WITH the insurance than without if it's before you go, if you have health and home owner's insurance that portion is useless to you, and if there is a hurricane, unless you chicken out and decide not to go at all you can still have most of your vacation.
What am I missing here???