Travel
Sick Man Asks For Princess Cruise Money To Be Returned
Christopher helps a couple get back their Princess cruise money after husband becomes very ill. Have you ever had a similar problem?
Princess Cruise Refund
My husband has six weeks to live. Why won't Princess Cruise refund our cruise?
Marla Osgood cancels her Princess cruise under the worst of circumstances — her husband is dying of cancer. But the cruise line refuses to refund her vacation, citing its refund policy. Can this vacation be rescued?
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Q: My husband and I planned to go on a Princess cruise this fall. He has esophageal cancer, but his last chemo radiation was at the end of 2015, and his doctor deemed him medically stable to take the trip.
Unfortunately, at the end of October, right after we paid in full for the trip, he had what we thought was a stroke. It turned out to be Bell's palsy, and at the same time they checked a tumor under his arm, which turned out to be cancer, and now we have found out that he has brain cancer. We canceled the trip.
Neither of these symptoms was pre-existing, but our insurance company is deeming them pre-existing conditions. Our insurance company claims that my husband's regular checkups are “treatment.”
Princess has offered us vouchers for a future cruise. Unfortunately, he has been given six weeks to live. Keep in mind that we had a cruise agent with Princess, whom we were very upfront with, and did exactly as she advised. She knew about the previous cancer.
Now our emails are being returned because either we're blocked or she is no longer there. My husband will be gone and unable to use a voucher. We could use this money for the burial instead. Can you help us get our $7,626 back? — Marla Osgood, Castle Rock, Washington
A: I am so, so sorry this is happening to you. Your travel agent should have helped you and your insurance company should have processed your claim, and if it didn't, then Princess should have refunded your cruise as a compassionate goodwill gesture. Instead, your agent left, your insurance company squirmed out of its obligation and the cruise line offered you a voucher it knew you couldn't use.
On a personal level, I'm saddened by your circumstances. For you and your husband, this literally was a bucket-list cruise, a final vacation together. To have it end like this is really heartbreaking.
You did everything you could to protect yourself. You worked with someone you believed to be a reputable travel consultant, bought insurance that you thought would cover you and booked a cruise through a company with an excellent reputation.
But let's break down each of those failures. It's not clear what happened to your travel agent, but you obviously were not dealing with a competent one. If you were, then the insurance you purchased would have covered your husband's pre-existing medical condition. Also, the agent wouldn't have left you high and dry. To avoid connecting with a bad agent, consider working with an accredited travel adviser. The American Society of Travel Agents (ASTA) has a helpful agent finder on its website.
When it looked as if you would lose your cruise, you also could have reached out to one of the executive contacts at Princess. I publish the names, numbers and email addresses of the Princess customer-service managers on my consumer-advocacy website:
Although Princess was under no obligation to refund your cruise, I asked it to review your case one more time. The cruise line agreed to refund the full amount of your vacation on compassionate grounds and in the interest of good customer service. I'm grateful for the company's reversal and hope this will bring you some peace during a difficult time.
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I have an update on last week's case involving Talor Min, whose husband died while on a trip to Malaysia. An early version of that story didn't fully describe the various travel insurance companies involved in the claim. There were three parties: the travel insurance company, AMIG; a travel insurance retailer, April; and Seven Corners, a third-party administrator contracted by April and AMIG. Seven Corners says it processed the claim on time six months ago but sent the check to Min's old address, which caused the delay. I'm happy to report that Min received her check and cashed it Jan. 5.
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Christopher Elliott is the ombudsman for National Geographic Traveler magazine and the author of “How To Be The World's Smartest Traveler.” You can read more travel tips on his blog, elliott.org, or email him at [email protected].
(c) 2018 Christopher Elliott. Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Read more from Christopher Elliot on travel refunds here!