SCTI and Blink introduce real-time flight delay benefit for Australia and New Zealand policyholders
A new automated delay support reflects a broader shift towards real-time travel insurance benefits that deliver assistance before traditional claims are submitted
Southern Cross Travel Insurance (SCTI) has launched a new automated benefit for eligible policyholders in Australia and New Zealand, offering immediate support when international flights are delayed by two hours or more.
The TravelCare Delay Assist benefit, available on eligible International Comprehensive Single Trip policies purchased from 1 July, provides registered customers with a digital voucher worth NZ$50 (A$40 in Australia) following a qualifying delay.
Rather than reimbursing costs after travel, the benefit is designed to provide practical assistance while disruption is still ongoing.
Eligible travellers who register their flights at least 24 hours before departure will receive notification by SMS and email if a qualifying delay occurs, allowing them to choose from Uber, TripGift or Woolworths vouchers without submitting a separate claim.
The launch reflects a wider trend within the travel insurance market towards parametric-style benefits, where predefined events automatically trigger support, reducing administrative burdens for both insurers and policyholders.
According to SCTI, delay-related disruption remains a significant source of claims. Between 2023 and April 2026, the insurer processed more than 11,400 delay-related claims from New Zealand customers, paying out more than NZ$15.3 million.
The insurer said severe weather accounted for almost half of those claims, while additional accommodation expenses featured in more than 44% of cases. Around 23% were linked to flight delays, cancellations, rescheduled services, and missed onward connections.
The geographical distribution of claims also highlights where disruption is creating the greatest financial exposure. Approximately 10% of delay claims involved travel in the US, where average payouts reached around NZ$1,600. Australia accounted for 13% of claims, with average payments of about NZ$1,060, while around 12% related to disruption occurring within New Zealand.
The new benefit is delivered through a partnership with Blink Parametric, which provides real-time travel disruption technology that enables automated customer notifications and benefit delivery when qualifying flight delays occur.
Automated disruption benefits may help reduce lower-value claims handling while improving customer engagement during travel. By providing immediate support through predefined triggers, insurers can potentially streamline claims operations while maintaining traditional cover for larger disruption-related expenses, such as accommodation, alternative transport, and trip interruption.
The benefit sits alongside SCTI’s existing policy cover rather than replacing standard claims for travel disruption. Policyholders can register up to 10 flights under a single policy, with cover extending to as many as eight named travellers.
The launch marks what SCTI describes as the first automated flight delay benefit of its kind for travel insurance customers across Australia and New Zealand.