Thank you for this vitally important information. I was living Mexico with my husband and four children. My late husband contract H1N1 and I am so thankful that her got major medical insurance prior to becoming ill. Even though my husband passed away the 3 months of care he received was top notch. But due to an insurance error I had to pay out of pocket in the initial onset for life saving medications. You can never have enough insurance when traveling and living abroad.
It was good the first time out, strange how the algo messes with things. Ran it through again, hope this one gets boosted better. Wonder if it's because you rep companies and are also giving advice, who knows. Maybe a google advertiser complained you are giving good unbiased info, lol.
What do you think of Berkshire Hathaway? We have the Luxury Care plan. We claimed the travel costs as $0 because we were just looking at the health coverage. They will cover trips up to 364 days. Because we are traveling back to the US for a few months, we got a 7 months plan for less than a $1,000 for two of us and we are both over 54. The maximum covered is $100,00, there is emergency evacuation, and no deductible. Sounds too good to be true.
Excellent information, thank you! Is is typical (or not) for global medical insurance policies to cover doctor's office visits? As in - for an annual physical exam, or periodic checkups with your cardiologist or dermatologist or OBGYN etc.? By cover, I mean cover cost after meeting annual deductible as I'm assuming these policies probably don't offer coverage for just a co-pay/co-insurance that we might experience in the US with medical insurance.
I would like to see you interview more people using and on the local national social healthcare of their country, not the catastrophic insurance you always discuss. I get your advertising your services. But similar to the USA (medicare) each country has its own national insurance coverage. The reason European countries are different then the USA is they offer it's citizens insurance for pre-existing and other health conditions as long as they are in that country. You mostly focus on expat life via a visa, but what about expat life with an EU country's citizenship? Can you start to shed some light on insurance for each country, and more interviews with local expats of each country.
We take the Expats that are volunteering to give us their story. We don’t have a stable of expats that we are turning down. If somebody volunteers to give us a story and they fit the description you’re looking for that’s great, but we are not trying to avoid giving you that information. If you have somebody that wants to volunteer to share information like you’re looking for please send them our direction.
@@popovdes5576 yes, email warrenjulietravel@gmail.com I will be delayed about four days responding. I’m traveling through multiple countries over the next few days.
@@WarrenJulieTravel I still work in the US and am a few years from being nomadic, but I definitely will once we fly the coop. But currently planning and trying to figure out the specifics.
I actually went to Google to make sure you weren’t speaking of Evacuation coverage which are components of many expat programs and/or travel insurance. Rescue insurance is to cover the cost of search and rescue, helicopter rescue, high altitude, military extraction hiring special ops, etc. I ran a quote at global rescue, and honestly it seemed pricey and I doubt I’d ever have a need for it. If going to somewhere sketchy or if you have extreme hobbies it could be important. For us and most I think regular medical evacuation and potential political evacuation both often included in less expensive programs would probably suffice.
On another note I went to peek at your channel and website. If you are in the Pirmasans, Zweibrucken area in August we will be there for a week. We plan to do some hiking, I was once stationed in Zweibrucken in my Air Force days. You are welcome to join us if you wish to.