How to file

How to File a Claim

Choose the path that best matches your incident. If you’re unsure, file anyway—our team is trained to translate panic into paperwork.

1) Start the claim

Use the “Edge-Related Claim” button below or contact us. Provide a short summary of what happened, where it happened, and whether anyone said “told you so.”


2) Confirm your coverage

We’ll verify your plan, effective dates, and any applicable endorsements (including—but not limited to—ice-wall proximity and compass-related misunderstandings).


3) Submit documentation

Upload the requested items (see checklist below). If you don’t have something, send what you do have. We’re not monsters. We’re adjusters.


4) Review & resolution

A specialist will review your claim, request clarifications, and issue a decision with a level of seriousness that is, frankly, impressive for a fictional company.

Claim checklist

What You’ll Need

To keep things moving, gather the items below. Yes, we know some of these are… specific.

Estate planning documents representing policy information

Policy & claimant details

Policy number, full name, contact info, and preferred method of communication (email, phone, carrier pigeon—within reason).

Contact Support
Insurance agent reviewing paperwork with a client

Incident documentation

Date/time, location, a brief narrative, and any supporting photos, receipts, or witness statements from people who were definitely there.

View Coverage Plans
Starry sky background representing supporting context and screenshots

Supporting context

Any relevant maps, compass readings, screenshots, or “helpful” links that influenced your decision-making. We won’t judge. We will, however, attach it to the file.

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What happens next

What Happens Next

After you file, we follow a predictable, well-documented sequence of events. It’s comforting—like a checklist, but with more suspense.

Speak With a Coverage Specialist
Common claim types

Edge-related incidents

Near-edge slips, unexpected gusts, and “I thought the railing was optional” moments.

Ice wall encounters

Navigation mishaps, unplanned detours, and frosty misunderstandings with perimeter infrastructure.

Compass confusion

When “north” becomes a suggestion and your itinerary becomes a lifestyle choice.

Globe misinformation exposure

Stress, workplace debates, and sudden urges to annotate textbooks. (Please hydrate.)

Map-related disappointment

When the projection “felt wrong” and you took it personally.

General existential uncertainty

A catch-all category for incidents that are technically “something,” but not yet “anything.”

File now, and we’ll respond with the speed and composure you deserve—plus a polite request for documentation.

Parody Disclaimer

Flat Earth Life Insurance is a fictional parody website for entertainment and design testing. No real insurance is sold, no real coverage exists, and no claims are actually processed or paid.