The business is New Zealand's largest online travel insurer and Morrison said removing the excess would hopefully ensure travellers who suffered minor ailments would seek medical attention more promptly, to prevent a minor problem from becoming a major and costly one.
The insurers' research showed that more than half of all Kiwi travellers had suffered from some sort of minor illness while overseas, the most common of these being a cold or flu (19 per cent), travellers' diarrhoea (16 per cent) and travel sickness (12 per cent).
"We recently had a case where a coral cut wasn't checked. It then got badly infected and cost $60,000 to fly the traveller home from Rarotonga via air ambulance," Morrison said.
"Similarly, a traveller to Australia was hospitalised with a foot ulcer and cellulitis caused by a spider bite, which then required an upgrade to business class in order to have the foot elevated during the flight home," he said.
The removal of the excess will take effect from today, Morrison said. The excess has been in place almost three years.