The company officially went under after failing to secure a £900m plus bailout on Saturday. Thousands of British holidaymakers found themselves stranded abroad without a replacement flights and others were left seeking assurance that their money would be refunded.
Customers have been left in disarray in the biggest repatriation effort since The Second World War. Similar situations have happened in the past, such as the BMI Insolvency case and the liquidation and collapse of WOW Air, but the chaos of the Thomas Cook collapse is on a different level. Throughout the chaos, customers have been looking to their insurance policies to provide assurance that they will get their money back.
However, two travel policies –…


