Insurance Advice

Insurance can be complex and it's important to check carefully all the details of your own insurance cover and decide whether you are satisfied with it. This page provides up-to-date advice on insurance issues.

Everyone participating in a Club activity must be aware of the hazard and risk associated with ski touring, ski mountaineering, and related activities.  As a member, you must accept this risk and ensure that you maintain appropriate and adequate insurance cover for the activity you are undertaking. The Club is not a tour operator, and it is an individual members responsibility to arrange the appropriate insurance cover. This webpage provides an overview on:

  • The Club’s position on insurance, including the minimum requirements to allow participation in Club activities (personal accident, rescue, and medical insurance, plus 3rd party liability cover). Cancellation insurance is desirable but not mandatory.
  • The Club’s combined liability insurance arrangements and its exclusions.
  • Insurance implications of FCO travel advice and the UK’s departure from the EU.
  • What to consider when selecting an insurance policy.

When it comes to choosing insurance, all the information below is advisory only, you must check it and take the final decisions for yourself.

Hazards of our sport and the need for adequate insurance cover

Like any outdoor activity, ski touring and ski mountaineering come with their own particular hazards and risks. Each ski tourer and ski mountaineer must accept, recognise, and manage these risks: being well prepared and being part of a well-functioning team is essential. 

Therefore, the Officers and the Committee of the Eagle Ski Club remind members that, despite the greatest care, accidents may still occur. All participants in any Club activity should be aware of and accept the inherent risk associated with the activity, be responsible for their own actions and involvement, and ensure that they have adequate insurance cover for the activity being undertaken.

MEMBERS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR CHECKING THEIR OWN INSURANCE AND ENSURING THAT IT IS ADEQUATE FOR THEIR NEEDS.

Personal accident, rescue, and medical insurance

If you want to take part in Club activities that involve ski touring, ski mountaineering or any off-piste activity, you must have adequate personal accident and search & rescue insurance cover to pay the cost of “getting you off the mountain” by helicopter if necessary, and to pay for any extended local hospitalisation and/or repatriation. Such cover should extend to all medical emergencies and not just accidents. Given that levels of cover provided by policies vary, you are advised to read policies carefully and check exactly:

  • what activities are covered
  • what search and rescue costs are covered
  • what the exclusions are, for example in terms of activity, geographical area, or altitude.

You must ensure that the levels of cover provided are adequate for the activities you intend to undertake.

The Club also advises members to look at how much additional insurance they need to cover risks such as cancellation of travel arrangements and accommodation bookings. Not all policies cover these risks in the same way and each policy should be carefully checked to ensure that it provides the cover required.

The Club's Combined Liability Insurance

The Club has Combined Liability Insurance cover through its affiliation with Mountaineering Scotland. This provides the club with the necessary public liability cover against claims for injuries, property damage, or death that occur in connection with club activities. It also provides 3rd party liability cover for individual members, who are residents of UK/Republic of Ireland, while they take part in Club activities, as well as during their own general mountaineering and ski mountaineering activities.

Due to the specifics of the Mountaineering Scotland Combined Liability policy, there are several exclusions to the 3rd party liability cover, most importantly:

  • Downhill piste skiing and lift accessed off piste skiing are not covered, except in the context of a ski tour. Therefore, you should consider arranging third party liability cover for piste skiing through your personal travel insurance, or schemes which may be on offer with the purchase of a lift pass. In all cases you should check the levels of cover offered.
  • Non-UK/ROI residents are not covered for third party liability by the Club’s Combined Liability Cover. In order to take part in Club activities, members resident outside of UK/Republic of Ireland must arrange third party liability cover. Such insurance may be available through personal insurance arrangements or membership of the national alpine club of the members country of residence. In all cases, non-UK/ROI resident members should check the details of their third-party liability cover.
  • Claims brought in North American Courts. Whilst the coverage is global, the policy specifically excludes claims brought in North American Courts.

It is recommended that you read through the information about our third party and combined liability insurance, especially regarding the list of secondary activities covered on club meets (e.g., mountain biking is covered but open water swimming is not).  You can find a summary of this insurance on the Mountaineering Scotland website at:

Mountaineering Scotland club insurance

There is also a useful summary document here:

Mountaineering Scotland Club Liability Insurance

Foreign Office Travel advice and withdrawal from the EU. 

Remember to check and follow the UK Government’s travel advice – failure to do so could invalidate your travel insurance. You should also remember to check the regulations of the countries that you plan to visit. The UK Government’s travel advice is available at https://www.gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice.

Given the UK’s departure from the EU and some residual insurance implications of Covid-19, you must keep up to date with developments and ensure that your insurance arrangements are suitable before you travel. The travel insurance section on the Association of British Insurers website is a useful resource:

https://www.abi.org.uk/products-and-issues/topics-and-issues/coronavirus-hub/travel-insurance

The rules on travelling to and from European Union countries changed from 1 January 2021. The government has published information on travelling in the EU on the GOV.uk website.

UK citizens are allowed to stay in the EU for 90 days in any 180-day period without a visa. At the time of writing, EU plans to introduce an Entry/Exit System (EES) to gather biometric data at point of entry into the EU have again been deferred. Further updates will be available on Government website

https://www.gov.uk/guidance/eu-entryexit-system

The deal negotiated by the UK government allows those issued with a European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) before the end of 2020 to continue to use it before its expiry date in EU countries other than Switzerland, Norway, Iceland or Liechtenstein. EU national’s resident in the UK may apply for a new UK EHIC card, while UK nationals may apply for UK Global Health Insurance Card (GHIC) which gives you the right to access state-provided healthcare during a temporary stay in the European Union (EU).

https://www.nhs.uk/using-the-nhs/healthcare-abroad/apply-for-a-free-uk-global-health-insurance-card-ghic/

Selecting an insurance policy

The policy or policies you need will depend very much on your personal circumstances, existing cover, age and activities foreseen. You must take particular care to look at exclusions and limitations on the policy: the small print is important, and the devil is in the detail.

What is absolutely essential is that your insurance policy covers:

  • the cost of getting you off the mountain in the event of an accident (i.e. helicopter rescue)
  • the cost of urgent medical support
  • adequate third-liability cover if you are a non-UK resident

Things you should consider when selecting your insurance policy include:

  • whether your insurance cover is adequate for your needs.
  • whether you have identified and understood the implications of any exclusions to the policy, which may be based on age, geographical area, altitude, activity to be undertaken, duration of cover or some other factor.

Cancellation insurance for both travel and accommodation costs advisable.

The club does not wish to make any recommendations as to particular Insurance policies and you should look at several different policies to decide what is right for you.

However, it might be useful to look in more detail at a commonly used policy: - membership of the Austrian Alpine Club UK (which also gives you reciprocal rights in most Alpine Huts) gives basic insurance that includes the cost of search and rescue (up to 25,000 Euros) with medical costs limited to 10,000 Euros (as of 2024). There are no age restrictions, tthough there are geographical exclusions to the cover (e.g. covers mainland Scandinavia but not Svalbard). You can increase the medical cover provided through the Austrian Alpine Club by purchasing an additional policy with their insurer AWS. Be aware of the requirement to contact their Europ Assistance helpline prior to inpatient medical treatment, repatriation etc as otherwise medical cover may be capped. Other insurers may adopt a similar stance and is a good reason why insurance details should be shared across all members of a touring/mountaineering party (standard practice on all club tours), so as to allow early notification to insurer in case of injury to a member.

Other insurers you may wish to consider include the British Mountaineering Council (BMC), and Snowcard.

Some members use a mix of general travel insurance policies coupled with sport specific policies for ski touring but be aware that a general travel insurance policy will not pay out for losses incurred whilst participating in an excluded activity.

Conclusion

The ESC tour application form for 2021 includes the statement that you “will be adequately insured for all foreseeable rescue, medical and third-party risks”, and that you acknowledge that “I may wish to insure myself for any losses connected with cancellation, however that may occur, should I choose to do so”.

Your participation in a Club activity is made on this basis, and it is your responsibility to arrange the appropriate insurance cover required for the activity you are undertaking.

The Club aims to assist members by providing information and advice, but the final decision and final responsibility is yours.

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