NZ trauma insurance — topic comparisons

Side-by-side breakdowns of how every NZ trauma insurer handles the highest-stakes definition and cover questions — sourced verbatim from each insurer's published policy wording.

Cancer definition

How each NZ trauma insurer defines 'Cancer' — what stages trigger a full payout, what triggers a partial-payment, what's excluded entirely. Cancer drives ~60% of NZ trauma claims so the definition sha…

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Heart attack definition

Heart attack definitions vary in troponin threshold, ECG criteria, and symptom requirements. The definition decides whether a modern troponin-detected MI counts under your policy.

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Stroke definition

Most NZ trauma policies require 24-hour residual neurological deficit confirmed by imaging — TIAs and rapidly-resolving strokes typically don't qualify. This page lists each insurer's stroke definitio…

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Partial-payment conditions

Most NZ trauma policies pay 10-25% of sum-insured for a defined list of early-stage / less-severe conditions (carcinoma in situ, angioplasty, early prostate cancer). The list and percentages vary wide…

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Accelerated vs standalone

Accelerated trauma cover reduces your underlying life sum-insured dollar-for-dollar on claim; standalone leaves it intact. Buy-back rules let you reinstate life cover after a claim — terms vary.

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Buy-back + reinstatement

Buy-back reinstates underlying life cover after a trauma claim without fresh underwriting. Trauma reinstatement re-adds cover for new conditions after a partial-payment claim. Both terms vary massivel…

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Future-insurability rights

Future-insurability rights let you increase trauma cover at defined life events (marriage, child, mortgage) without fresh medical evidence. Critical for buyers with family-history loadings.

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Children's trauma rider

Most NZ trauma policies offer a children's-trauma-rider add-on with a defined per-child sum-insured cap (often $50,000-$200,000). Covered conditions for children differ from adult cover.

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Pre-existing conditions

NZ trauma insurers underwrite at application — pre-existing conditions usually result in loadings (25-200%), permanent exclusions, or declination. Disclosure rules and re-underwriting policies vary.

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Common exclusions

Self-inflicted injury, war / civil unrest, criminal acts, drug use, and certain pre-existing conditions are commonly excluded. Specific exclusion lists vary by insurer.

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Data sources

Every fact on these pages is extracted from the current published policy wording PDF for each insurer, with the source PDF URL cited inline. Machine-readable equivalents at /api/topic/{slug}/summary.md and /api/topic/{slug}/facts.json.