Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Thailand News and Discussion Forum | ASEANNOW

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Brit Backpacker Hurt in Crash Faces Large Bill

A British backpacker travelling in Thailand has appealed for help after she was seriously injured in a motorbike crash and left with mounting medical bills when her travel insurance was found to be invalid.

Get today's headlines by email image.png

Chloe Foster, 26, from Medway, Kent, was attending a full moon party on Koh Pha-Ngan last Friday, 1 May, when she met a 20-year-old British tourist who offered her a lift on his motorbike. Speaking from her hospital bed, Foster said the rider was travelling “pretty fast” before the bike suddenly “did a whole 360”, throwing her from the vehicle and knocking her unconscious.

Foster said she later learned the man had fled the scene after the crash, leaving her alone on the roadside until another person found her and arranged medical help. She described waking up in hospital in Thailand as one of the “scariest moments” of her life.

The backpacker suffered multiple injuries, including a broken foot, a fractured cheek and a bloodshot eye. She also said the facial injury had left half of her face “paralysed”. After the crash, Foster discovered that her travel insurance policy would not cover her treatment costs.

image.jpeg

Although she had taken out insurance before travelling, she said the policy became invalid because she had exceeded the 31-day maximum limit allowed for a single trip under the terms and conditions. In a statement shared through a GoFundMe page set up to cover her medical expenses, Foster said: “I was left alone and unconscious on the side of the road after a hit-and-run in Thailand.”

She added: “I was a passenger on a motorbike when it crashed. The driver got up and left me there, without calling for help. I don’t remember any of it, but I know I was lying there alone, unconscious, until someone found me and thankfully got me to the hospital.”

Foster said she now faces medical costs already exceeding GBP4,000, with bills continuing to rise as further treatment is required. She said she felt “scared, vulnerable and honestly a bit lost” while recovering alone far from home.

The incident has also prompted Foster to warn other travellers to carefully check the terms of their insurance policies before travelling abroad. She urged holidaymakers to read the “fine print” closely and to be cautious about accepting rides from people they do not know, especially if alcohol may be involved.

The Daily Mall reported the case highlights the financial risks travellers can face overseas when insurance policies contain restrictions linked to trip length or activities such as riding on motorbikes. Authorities have not released further details about the crash or whether any investigation is under way into the actions of the rider who allegedly left the scene.

image.png

Pictures courtesy of Daily Mail

Join the discussion? image.png

Already a member? image.png

image.png Adapted by ASEAN Now Dailymail 9 May 2026

User Feedback

Recommended Comments

GammaGlobulin Star Member

GammaGlobulin

Advanced Member
5 hours ago, Rockyroad said:

They keep coming and doing stupid things. Random stranger, no helmet. Fmp fools.

Yes. I was thinking she made, that day, a long succession of serious wrong turns that day.

Don't these people read books about history and probability theory?

What about insurance actuarial tables?

Don't kids pay attention while reading these mortality tables?

The only question I had, after reading her story, was whether or not the 20-year-old raped her...

Before fleeing, leaving her uncounscious and completely vulnerable.

So many times, these bad outcomes can be prevented by responisble forethought1.

So, has she left a description of the culprit with the police?

Has she completed her composite drawing?

And, where is it?

I want to see a drawing of this guy, and his tattoos.

digger70 Ruby Member

digger70

Advanced Member

Brit Backpacker Hurt in Crash Faces Large Bill

It's a good time now toget the Govment to charge all people/tourists who enter Los to pay Thb 300 so that that will cover the insurance for the tourists.

Than people can stop their Go Fund Begging for money.

As of early 2026, Thailand is planning to implement a 300-baht (approx. $9 USD) entry fee for foreign tourists arriving by air, with a potential 150-baht fee for land/sea arrivals, aimed at supporting tourism infrastructure and visitor insurance. While finalized details are pending, this fee is expected to be introduced in mid-2026. [1, 2, 3, 4]

impulse Star Member

impulse

Advanced Member

Brit Backpacker Hurt in Crash Faces Large Bill

It's a good time now toget the Govment to charge all people/tourists who enter Los to pay Thb 300 so that that will cover the insurance for the tourists.

Than people can stop their Go Fund Begging for money.

As of early 2026, Thailand is planning to implement a 300-baht (approx. $9 USD) entry fee for foreign tourists arriving by air, with a potential 150-baht fee for land/sea arrivals, aimed at supporting tourism infrastructure and visitor insurance. While finalized details are pending, this fee is expected to be introduced in mid-2026. [1, 2, 3, 4]

If you think they're going to offer meaningful insurance for $9, you're in for a rude awakening. They plan to use the money to plug the gaps when tourists are unwilling or unable to pay the hospitals. It's nowhere near "insurance".

digger70 Ruby Member

digger70

Advanced Member
26 minutes ago, impulse said:

If you think they're going to offer meaningful insurance for $9, you're in for a rude awakening. They plan to use the money to plug the gaps when tourists are unwilling or unable to pay the hospitals. It's nowhere near "insurance".

There are millions off people coming to Los so you think that they can't pay the hospitals for a couple tourists that get hurt.

Sure they can and have Millions of Thb left over

241195_1469957797 Explorer Member

241195_1469957797

Member

I'm sure she has British accident insurance. These companies specialize in ripping off their customers. I advise the lady to contact the Ombudsman in the UK.

NedR69 Silver Member

NedR69

Advanced Member

Another Backpacker Begpacker, and soon there will be be a go-fund-me to prove this.  Usual Brit suspect.

Eloquent pilgrim Platinum Member

Eloquent pilgrim

Advanced Member

I feel sorry for the lass, but no insurance, no helmet, and jumping on the back of a motorbike being aimed by a 20 year old testosterone fuelled lad, who may well have been in a state of altered consciousness after a full moon party, is quite a list of erroneous decisions.

Hope she soon recovers and learns some lessons from the experience.

Eloquent pilgrim Platinum Member

Eloquent pilgrim

Advanced Member
16 minutes ago, 241195_1469957797 said:

I'm sure she has British accident insurance. These companies specialize in ripping off their customers. I advise the lady to contact the Ombudsman in the UK.

Why are you sure she has accident insurance; the article states quite clearly that her insurance had expired, and even if it was within a valid date frame, most policies would be invalidated by riding or riding pillion on any motorcycle sans helmet.

Wongkitlo Gold Member

Wongkitlo

Advanced Member
4 hours ago, phil2407 said:

So understandable if driving the scooter without licence & exceeded the 31 days insurance coverage but was a passenger (by a coward that just left her)

If you're on a motorbike taxi & they crash does your travel insurance cover you for that as some of the drivers have 0 liability insurance or again refused?

It probably changes with different policies but mine years ago was if you are on a licenced motorcycle taxi your insurance will cover you

retayl Advanced Member

retayl

Member
6 hours ago, Celsius said:

They all have one thing in common 💋

Your confusing that with the standard drug smuggling influencers lip pout.

Purdey Diamond Member

Purdey

Advanced Member

Not much sympathy for these people. 175,000 baht for a broken leg and some scrapes seems excessive but that's private hospitals, they'll charge what they want if you don't negotiate

Eloquent pilgrim Platinum Member

Eloquent pilgrim

Advanced Member
5 hours ago, phil2407 said:

So understandable if driving the scooter without licence & exceeded the 31 days insurance coverage but was a passenger (by a coward that just left her)

If you're on a motorbike taxi & they crash does your travel insurance cover you for that as some of the drivers have 0 liability insurance or again refused?

The details of her insurance policy were not made clear; the only thing I can think of, is that she has one of the annual policies that cover you for a whole year, but the terms are that no single trip is to exceed 31 days, and that she has exceeded those terms, which she should have been aware of.

Legal Lifeline Silver Member

Legal Lifeline

Forum Sponsor
23 minutes ago, Eloquent pilgrim said:

I feel sorry for the lass, but no insurance, no helmet, and jumping on the back of a motorbike being aimed by a 20 year old testosterone fuelled lad, who may well have been in a state of altered consciousness after a full moon party, is quite a list of erroneous decisions.

Hope she soon recovers and learns some lessons from the experience.

Indeed- a harsh lesson learned in a nasty way

I hope she recovers soon from this nasty experience

Eloquent pilgrim Platinum Member

Eloquent pilgrim

Advanced Member
11 minutes ago, Wongkitlo said:

It probably changes with different policies but mine years ago was if you are on a licenced motorcycle taxi your insurance will cover you

Yes, agreed, but her policy had expired, so you cannot expect the insurance company to be responsible; also don't we know if the motorcycle she was on was licensed and she wasn't wearing a helmet, which invalidates most policies even if they are in valid date

NanLaew Star Member

NanLaew

Advanced Member
16 minutes ago, Wongkitlo said:

It probably changes with different policies but mine years ago was if you are on a licenced motorcycle taxi your insurance will cover you

Question: What is a "licensed motorcycle taxi" in Thailand?

Answer: Non existent.

GammaGlobulin Star Member

GammaGlobulin

Advanced Member

Broken knee and full cast in Taiwan, at National Taiwan University Hospital, no more than USD100

So, I do not understand these costs in Thailand.

Makes no sense to me.

Taiwan University Hospital is one of the best in Asia.

Taiwan healthcare is excellent.

TopThai1964 Explorer Member

TopThai1964

Member

easy to find out the driver if he fled and left motorbike behind

steve187 Ruby Member

steve187

Advanced Member
5 hours ago, phil2407 said:

So understandable if driving the scooter without licence & exceeded the 31 days insurance coverage but was a passenger (by a coward that just left her)

If you're on a motorbike taxi & they crash does your travel insurance cover you for that as some of the drivers have 0 liability insurance or again refused?

A very very small amount of tourists would be covered whilst on a motorcycle involved in an accident, be that riding, pillion or m/c taxi

Front Row Silver Member

Front Row

Advanced Member

I have a certain amount of pity for her, or anyone who gets injured. However, she should have read the fine print on her travel insurance policy. And it’s just downright dumb to not know the start and expiration dates of her policy.

If I plan to go alpine skiing while on vacation I have to get special travel insurance as almost all TI policies exclude that. Lots of sports and activities are often excluded. Always read the fine print.

khunPer Diamond Member

khunPer

Advanced Member
7 hours ago, Rockyroad said:

Haad Rin was the nicest beach there pre fmp.

There was nobody and nothing there – Haad Rin and Sunrise Beach – before a group of hippies decided to get there in a longtail boat to celebrate Joe's 21st birthday, as the police in Lamai became too interested in their mushroom shakes. They brought guitars and made bonfires, and slept on the beach until next day. It was such a cool party that they decided to repeat at next full Moon – there have done that ever since...😎

Lacessit Star Member

Lacessit

Advanced Member

No way medical expenses for her type of injuries would have cost that much at a government hospital.

khunPer Diamond Member

khunPer

Advanced Member
7 hours ago, Georgealbert said:

Although she had taken out insurance before travelling, she said the policy became invalid because she had exceeded the 31-day maximum limit allowed for a single trip under the terms and conditions.

Sad story – very sad indeed – it show that you shall not neglect to have a proper insurance, including checking validity and what's written in small text, often it's exceptions. Too many seems to forget that and use "goFundMe" instead.

rocketboy2 Gold Member

rocketboy2

Advanced Member

Hope she recovers quickly.

As for the disgusting Cad, who left her in the road.

I hope someone knows who his is, and lets the uk tabloids know his face and name.

Kinnock Platinum Member

Kinnock

Advanced Member

Normally I have little sympathy for the 'Go fund me tourists', but this lady was unlucky. If I've understood correctly, her insurance had not expired, but in the small print there was a limit on the maximum length of stay for any one trip - that's easy to miss.

And the rider running away was despicable.

And while a seasoned ex pat without health insurance could check themselves out of hospital and recover in a cheap hotel, a British tourist is going to follow the instructions of the doctor and let the bills mount up, as that's the NHS way.

And I bet most of us have done dumber things in our youth than accept a ride on a scooter.

Spock Silver Member

Spock

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, 241195_1469957797 said:

I'm sure she has British accident insurance. These companies specialize in ripping off their customers. I advise the lady to contact the Ombudsman in the UK.

If she had no helmet or the driver was unlicensed, speeding or was intoxicated or drug infused, she would not have qualified anyway, and I'd be 100% sure no insurance company would pay up. The driver fleeing the scene is probably sufficient in itself to wave any right to an insurance claim.

stevenl Star Member

stevenl

Advanced Member
10 minutes ago, Kinnock said:

Normally I have little sympathy for the 'Go fund me tourists', but this lady was unlucky. If I've understood correctly, her insurance had not expired, but in the small print there was a limit on the maximum length of stay for any one trip - that's easy to miss.

And the rider running away was despicable.

And while a seasoned ex pat without health insurance could check themselves out of hospital and recover in a cheap hotel, a British tourist is going to follow the instructions of the doctor and let the bills mount up, as that's the NHS way.

And I bet most of us have done dumber things in our youth than accept a ride on a scooter.

Good to see empathy and reasonable thinking here, thanks.

stevenl Star Member

stevenl

Advanced Member
7 minutes ago, Spock said:

If she had no helmet or the driver was unlicensed, speeding or was intoxicated or drug infused, she would not have qualified anyway, and I'd be 100% sure no insurance company would pay up. The driver fleeing the scene is probably sufficient in itself to wave any right to an insurance claim.

Incorrect. Many health insurance companies will pay out. Driver fleeing the scene would not be reason not to pay out for health or travel insurance.

BusyB Platinum Member

BusyB

Advanced Member
55 minutes ago, 241195_1469957797 said:

I'm sure she has British accident insurance. These companies specialize in ripping off their customers. I advise the lady to contact the Ombudsman in the UK.

I agree about rip-off Britain but that'd be a waste of time.

Health insurance is often bundled with baggage loss and trip cancellation insurance etc., and usually restricts the validity to 30 days, in some cases 45, for any number of trips in a year.

They're aimed at the typical holiday maker and even respected companies offer them - in other countries as well. Although they often headline as '1 year insurance package', the 30 day per trip duration is usually on the first page, not hidden in T+Cs. I believe that's illegal.

My credit card health insurance covers me explicitly for any number of trips up to 90 days. (It does pay as well, have used it.)

Anything over 90 days, which happens once a year, I get comprehensive health cover from a respected company to cover me for the entire duration - you can't sort of tack it on at the end of the 90 day CC coverage. (Has also paid out.)

I sometimes wonder how people who don't even understand the validity of their own health insurance even find their departure airport.

Still, I feel sorry for what happened to her with her FMP beau turning out to be such a disgusting slime bag. Probably had a few beers, but had no license, no experience, and no backbone either.

Guess that's another of the things you have to learn to navigate when you're traveling. Kudos to Chloe for adventuring out alone. Welcome to the university of life.

jippytum Platinum Member

jippytum

Advanced Member
5 hours ago, smedly said:

once she got her foot sorted out (which it was) she should have gone to her hotel, typical Thai hospital milking cash, how many people have broken arms/legs etc and gone home once it gets plastered, granted not always like that but 90% are, so she got a black eye and a cracked cheek - go to your hotel and have a few days rest

The point is tme hospital will not let you leave until. you pay the bill.

Long term expats now have to pay upfront before tests even at government hocpitals because of foreigner's not paying medical bills.

John Drake Diamond Member

John Drake

Advanced Member
8 hours ago, Georgealbert said:

After the crash, Foster discovered that her travel insurance policy would not cover her treatment costs.

Yet another example of how mandating insurance coverage will not solve many/most of these incidents where the victims in an accident disqualify themselves either through lapse after time or other behavior that invalidates whatever coverage they have.

Create an account or sign in to comment

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.