Can a travel insurance app really keep you safer? Here’s the surprising answer
A travel insurance app may be the last place you’d look when you’re concerned about safety. But for experienced travelers, it is becoming a first stop.
A travel insurance app may be the last place you’d look when you’re concerned about safety. But for experienced travelers, it is becoming a first stop.
After a scooter accident, Jim Hutslar cancels his British Airways flight. Expedia offers him a $1,987 ticket credit. But British Airways refuses, claiming he was a “no show” for his flight. Is the money lost?
Tracy Pruss lost her iPhone 13 as she boarded an American Airlines flight from Raleigh-Durham to Cincinnati. The device slipped out of her pocket on the jetway.
When it comes to travel, is loyalty dead?
That’s the question many travelers have been asking themselves during a record-breaking summer.
You’re carrying too much luggage. Here’s how to lighten up.
Catriona Garry misses her flight from Edinburgh to Boston because there’s only one ticket agent at the airport. Can she get $1,200 in rebooking fees refunded?
When Lesle Collins flew from Dallas to Denver last summer, her baggage did not. She tried to file a luggage claim — but she could not.
If you think customer service is a joke, you’ve probably been traveling recently.
When James Cottrell bought travel medical insurance for himself and his wife for their North Atlantic cruise last summer, he never expected to use it. But if he had to, he was confident his GeoBlue travel medical plan would be there for him — and that it would pay his claim promptly.
Insects are coming for your next vacation.