Club Direct, a travel insurance company in Britain, provides insurance plans for protection from falling coconuts.
British Insurer Covers Travelers Against Coconut Attacks
In 2002, a British travel insurance company made headlines with what seemed like the most ridiculous policy ever conceived: protection against falling coconuts. Club Direct wasn't joking.
The announcement came after Australian local councils started uprooting coconut trees out of fear they'd be sued by injured tourists. Brent Escott, Club Direct's managing director at the time, saw an opportunity to actually address a real—if bizarre—danger lurking in tropical paradises.
Deadlier Than Jaws
Here's the kicker: coconuts kill approximately 150 people worldwide each year. That makes them roughly ten times more dangerous than sharks, which kill about 10-15 people annually. A fully grown coconut weighs 3-4 pounds and can fall from heights of up to 80 feet, reaching speeds of 50 mph on impact.
Think of it as getting hit by a bowling ball dropped from an eight-story building. Suddenly, that beach hammock under a palm tree doesn't seem so relaxing.
When Marketing Meets Reality
Club Direct's coconut coverage was brilliant marketing—weird enough to generate press, but grounded in actual risk assessment. The policy covered:
- Medical treatment for coconut-related injuries
- Emergency evacuation if needed
- Standard travel insurance benefits triggered by the incident
Was it a publicity stunt? Absolutely. Was it also legitimate insurance addressing a statistically significant travel hazard? Also yes.
The story became so famous that it's still cited decades later as an example of unusual insurance policies. Club Direct (which dissolved as a corporate entity in 2017, though the brand continues) understood something important: exotic vacation destinations come with exotic risks.
The Coconut Danger Zone
Most coconut fatalities occur in the Pacific Islands, Southeast Asia, and the Caribbean—exactly where British tourists go to escape dreary weather. The victims are often people lounging on beaches, walking through resorts, or napping in the shade.
Some tropical destinations now post warning signs near coconut palms. Others hire workers to regularly harvest coconuts before they can fall. A few resorts have eliminated coconut trees entirely from guest areas, which seems extreme until you remember the whole "150 deaths per year" thing.
So the next time you're picking a spot to set up your beach towel, maybe give those swaying palms a little more respect. And yes, you can actually get insurance for that.