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I hope this thread prompts readers to check the T&C before committing themselves. Where insurers have a charge for cancellation (and most, if not all, do), they are legally required to provide this information in their T&C. If this info is not provided up front, they will probably have covered themselves with a 14-day period that allows cancellation without charge, providing that a claim has not been made. There can be several variations in T&C, but the insurers will always have ensured that their conditions are within the law - the only safeguard for anyone taking out insurance is to (a) ask all the necessary questions and, (b) to take the trouble to read the T&C. Too many people simply do not bother to read the T&C, and this one failure leaves them helpless when an argument arises at a later date. Bertie.
------------- The 2 Tops
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