Expatriate Group is based in the United Kingdom and backed by GenRe. Its Expatriate Healthcare plans offer worldwide coverage for expats only.
Key Features
- Available to expats up to age 65
- Worldwide coverage only
- Community rating means any annual premium increases will be reasonable and renewal is guaranteed
- Bank transfers and credit card payments available
- Employer group plans available with significant discount
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Frequently Asked Questions
The Expatriate Healthcare plan are designed for expats only, up to age 65.
All private insurance plans will cover you for illnesses and injuries that require overnight hospitalization for treatment (inpatient cover). Most also offer optional coverage for routine outpatient, maternity or dental expenses.
The types of inpatient expenses covered are fairly standard across the industry, including room and board, surgeries and treatment, hospitalization, emergency evacuation. There is more variability among the optional coverages; typically, greater benefits will trigger higher premiums.
Policies are managed on an annual basis: you pay premiums for a year of coverage and the insurer pays for your eligible expenses up to an annual limit.
The Expatriate Healthcare plans can cover you worldwide or close to it, with a range of areas available.
It’s important to understand that private health insurance is a for-profit business. People with pre-existing medical conditions represent a risk to profitability, since they are far more likely to make claims than people who are entirely healthy, which affects the bottom line. Insurers manage this risk in a number of ways.
Most insurers use medical underwriting to assess a potential customer’s risk based on medical history. Then they decide whether to:
Exclude certain conditions from the coverage of a policy, or
Impose a fee for covering specific conditions (called loading), or
Cover certain conditions despite the risk, or offer to reassess a condition at a later date
coverage for typically 2 years before covering them.
Employer groups of certain sizes can qualify for a policy that disregards participants’ medical history. This is the only way to cover certain conditions.
HCI is more likely than many insurers to cover pre-existing conditions.
Your insurance is managed on an annual basis. Like most products, health insurance is subject to price changes, usually in the form of premium increases based on a number of factors.
Since this is a for-profit business, changes are based in part on past-year performance (generally premiums minus claims plus overhead) and medical inflation.
All of Tenzing’s international health insurance offerings operate on what is called a community rating basis, which takes into account all the covered individuals in a geographic insurance plan — if the plan did well, premium increases will be low, and vice versa. Any premium or benefit changes apply to everyone in the plan.
Some insurers use an experience rating approach, which looks at whether each individual’s premiums exceeded their claims and makes adjustments accordingly. This approach can result in wildly differing changes.
Your age is also a significant factor in determining your premium — as you grow older, your health generally declines and your risk increases. So annual premium changes also reflect your age. The increase can be larger if the insurer uses age bands: imposing a larger increase at 5-year intervals rather than a smaller increase each year.
Since this is a for-profit business, changes are based in part on past-year performance (generally premiums minus claims plus overhead) and medical inflation.
All of Tenzing’s international health insurance offerings operate on what is called a community rating basis, which takes into account all the covered individuals in a geographic insurance plan — if the plan did well, premium increases will be low, and vice versa. Any premium or benefit changes apply to everyone in the plan.
Some insurers use an experience rating approach, which looks at whether each individual’s premiums exceeded their claims and makes adjustments accordingly. This approach can result in wildly differing changes.
Your age is also a significant factor in determining your premium — as you grow older, your health generally declines and your risk increases. So annual premium changes also reflect your age. The increase can be larger if the insurer uses age bands: imposing a larger increase at 5-year intervals rather than a smaller increase each year.
Expatriate Healthcare doesn’t offer a direct billing network per se, but will usually be able to work with your local provider to set up a Guarantee of Payment (GoP), which has the same effect – payment for treatment will be managed between the insurer and the hospital or clinic so that you don’t need to pay directly.
All of Tenzing’s international health plans operate on an annual basis, but some do allow you to make periodic payments rather than all at once.
Expatriate Healthcare provides for monthly payments with a 6% fee.
Expatriate Healthcare offers group health insurance plans that allow employers to provide peace of mind to valued employees.
There are generally two types of employer plans:
Full medical underwriting (FMU) requires covered individuals to provide medical history, which the insurer uses to assess risk and assign premiums.
Employer groups that are sufficiently large can qualify for a policy that disregards participants’ medical history (MHD). This is the only way to cover certain conditions.