Horse riding on the beach, hiring a moped for the day, or trying jet skiing because it looks fun from the hotel pool can all feel like normal parts of a holiday.
But some travel insurance policies may not cover these activities as standard.
For UK holidaymakers, this can become a costly problem. Especially when an activity is booked abroad without checking the policy first. At Norton Insurance Brokers, we often remind travellers to check the details before they go. Not because every activity is excluded, but because every policy is different.
A quick check before you book could help avoid a difficult claim later.
Which holiday activities should UK travellers check before taking part?
Some holiday activities can fall outside standard travel insurance cover, even when they feel like a normal part of the trip. This does not mean they are never covered. It means you should check the wording before taking part.
Activities to check include horse riding, quad biking, jet skiing, moped or scooter hire, scuba diving, snorkelling, sea kayaking, hiking or trekking, parasailing and white-water rafting.
These activities are common on holidays, which is what makes the risk easy to miss. You may not see horse riding or jet skiing as extreme, but your insurer may still treat them as higher risk.
Why do holidaymakers get caught out by activity exclusions?
Many travellers arrange travel insurance before they know exactly what they will do on holiday. You might book a week in Spain, Greece, Turkey or Thailand with no firm plan beyond relaxing, then decide to join a boat trip, hire a scooter or book a guided trek after you arrive.
That is where the problem can start. Your travel insurance policy may include some activities, exclude others, or only cover them if certain rules are followed.
Cover could depend on whether you use a licensed activity provider, wear a helmet or safety equipment, take part under supervision, or stay within set depth, height or route limits. Some policies may also treat recreational activities differently from competitive or unsupervised activities.
This is why checking the policy wording matters. Not just the activity name, but the conditions attached to it.
Can a normal resort activity affect a travel insurance claim?
Yes, it can. A resort gym, beach horse ride, guided hike or jet ski session may feel like part of a normal holiday, but travel insurance policies can draw lines in different places.
Some policies may include certain activities as standard. Others may ask you to add an activity pack or exclude the activity altogether. In some cases, cover may only apply if you meet specific safety conditions.
This is where travellers can get caught out. You may think you are not doing anything extreme, while the policy may class the activity as something that needs extra cover.
That gap can become a problem if you are injured and need medical treatment abroad.
What should you check in your travel insurance policy?
Before taking part in any holiday activity, check whether the activity is named in your policy. Do not assume it is covered because it is popular with tourists.
Look for words such as horse riding, quad biking, scuba diving, trekking, moped hire, water sports and adventure activities. If the wording is unclear, ask your insurer or broker before you take part.
You should also check whether you need extra activity cover. Some policies allow you to add cover for certain activities, sometimes called activity cover, adventure sports cover, hazardous activity cover, winter sports cover or water sports cover.
Names vary by insurer. What matters is whether the activity is included for your trip.