Women discussing what is covered in supplier failure insurance

What SFI Really Covers: A Complete Supplier Failure Insurance Guide for Your Travel Business

If you have worked in travel for more than five minutes, you will know this industry rests on a long chain of suppliers, relationships and trust. Most of the time everything runs exactly as it should. Aircraft take off, hotels honour their allocations, ground handlers meet guests at the airport, and trips unfold without fuss. But every travel business also knows the uncomfortable truth. When a supplier collapses, the financial and operational fallout almost always lands on the business that sold the holiday, not the supplier who failed.

Supplier failure insurance, or SFI, exists to give travel companies protection for exactly these moments. It is not glamorous, and it is rarely something anyone wants to think about on a Monday morning, but it has become one of the most important financial safeguards a travel business can have. This guide explains what SFI really covers, why it is becoming essential rather than optional, and how TMU Management helps travel companies make sure they are properly protected.

Hotel receptionist discussing paperwork with guests

What is Supplier Failure Insurance in Plain Terms?

Supplier failure insurance reimburses your business if one of your suppliers cannot deliver the services your customer has already paid for. That might be because the supplier becomes insolvent, closes unexpectedly, stops trading, or simply cannot provide what was contracted. Whatever the reason, the organiser, meaning you, is still responsible for refunding or re-accommodating the customer. SFI steps in so the financial impact does not fall entirely on your business.

Coins under a blue umbrella

What Does Suplier Failure Insurance Actually Cover?

Policies vary, but in reality most cover the same core areas.

  1. Insolvency of a supplier:  If a hotel chain, airline, cruise operator, DMC, or ground handler goes bust, SFI protects you from having to absorb the financial loss.
  2. Failure to deliver contracted services:  It is not always insolvency. Sometimes suppliers fail quietly. A property closes, a route is cancelled, or services collapse mid-season. SFI helps you put things right without draining working capital.
  3. Extra costs of rebooking customers:  Replacing a failed supplier often comes at short notice and at a higher cost. SFI can cover that increase.
  4. Your obligations under the Package Travel Regulations (PTRs):  Whether the supplier survives or not, the customer's contract is with you. The Package Travel Regulations require you to put things right and uphold the full value of the holiday sold. SFI helps you meet your legal responsibilities without putting pressure on your cash flow.
  5. Prepayments and deposits:  If you have paid a supplier upfront and they collapse before delivering the service, SFI protects that money too.

In short, SFI covers the financial gaps where trust meets risk.

Signing a supplier failure insurance agreement

Why Travel Businesses Need SFI Now More Than Ever

The risk landscape has changed, and travel businesses are feeling it.

  1. Supplier failures are becoming more common: The sector is still feeling long term effects of global shocks, rising costs, shifting consumer expectations, and unpredictable trading conditions. Even established suppliers are not immune. One collapse can wipe out a season's profits for an unprotected business.
  2. The Package Travel Regulations place responsibility on the organiser: It does not matter whose fault the failure is. If the customer bought a package, the organiser must put it right. That might mean refunds, moving customers to a new hotel, rebooking flights, or replacing ground services. Without insurance, the organiser pays for all of it.
  3. Prepayments increase exposure: Most travel businesses must prepay or part pay suppliers to secure good rates or allocations. That money is immediately at risk if something goes wrong further down the chain.
  4. Customers expect immediate resolution: A supplier collapse does not buy you extra time with customers. They expect answers and alternatives straightaway. SFI gives you the financial ability to act quickly and confidently.
  5. Margins are too tight to absorb major surprises: Travel is a volume driven industry. Few companies can comfortably absorb the impact of even one major supplier failure. SFI turns an unpredictable financial shock into a manageable cost.
Businessmen shaking hands in a meeting, representing TMU partnerships

How TMU Management Helps Travel Businesses Navigate SFI

Insurance only becomes valuable when it is understood properly and aligned with how a business actually trades. This is where specialist support makes a meaningful difference.

TMU provides clarity on exposure and helps travel businesses identify the level of cover they genuinely need. Because we work exclusively within the travel sector, our advice reflects real operational patterns, supplier relationships, financial protection duties, and the commercial realities of running a travel business.

We also help build stronger internal processes around due diligence and supplier risk management, making businesses more resilient and improving the ease and success rate of claims when issues arise. When a supplier failure does occur, we support the claims process, communication with insurers, and evidence preparation so the business can continue operating while the situation is resolved.

Woman using a laptop with a contract hologram overlaid

SFI Is Quiet, Unpopular and Essential

No one enters the travel industry excited about insurance, but every professional in the sector knows that supplier failure can be sudden, unpredictable, and financially damaging. SFI does not stop disruption, but it prevents the disruption from becoming a crisis. It protects revenue, preserves reputation, and helps you meet your obligations without putting your business under strain. It has become one of the most effective financial safeguards available to travel businesses of all sizes.

With expert guidance from TMU Management, you can be confident that the cover you choose is fit for purpose, commercially sensible and aligned with the way you operate. If you would like to review your current insurance arrangements, explore supplier failure insurance for the first time, or understand whether your business has gaps in its financial protection, TMU Management is here to help. Contact us today to speak with an expert and put the right safeguards in place for your travel business.

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