Travel Insurance
Travel Insurance safeguards your trip against the unexpected—be it rebooking costs, lost baggage, medical emergencies, or evacuation needs. Whether you’re planning a weekend getaway, a luxury vacation, or a daring adventure abroad, our flexible policies—ranging from single-trip to annual multi-trip plans—offer critical protection tailored to your journey.
Table of Content


Why Travel Insurance Matters
- Medical Expenses & Evacuation: Health insurance may not cover international care. Travel insurance steps in, covering emergency medical treatment abroad, medical evacuation, and repatriation—for instance, if you’re hospitalized or need critical transport home.
- Trip Cancellation, Delay & Interruption: Weather, strikes, or scheduling issues can disrupt travel. These policies help recoup non-refundable costs or reimburse for unexpected changes.
- Lost, Damaged, or Delayed Baggage: Reimbursement for lost or delayed belongings—including essential items—helps you stay on track.
- Accidental Death & Dismemberment (AD&D): Coverage for serious accidents during travel, including loss of limbs or life, ensuring financial support for affected individuals or families.
- 24/7 Global Assistance: From medical coordination to lost documents or urgent logistics, real-time help is just a call away.
Travel Insurance
Related FAQs
Do I really need travel insurance?
It depends on your trip and your existing coverage. Travel insurance can protect your health abroad, reimburse nonrefundable trip costs (cancellation/interruption/delay), and help with lost baggage—gaps your current insurance or cards may not fully cover.
When should I buy it?
Buy soon after your first trip payment. Some upgrades (like Cancel For Any Reason) and many pre-existing condition waivers require purchase within a short window (often 10–21 days, varies by plan).
What core coverages should I look for?
At minimum: travel medical, medical evacuation/repatriation, trip cancellation/interruption, trip delay, and baggage. Confirm the policy covers your destinations, trip length, and planned activities.
Does my health insurance or Medicare cover me internationally?
Original Medicare (Parts A & B) generally doesn’t cover care outside the U.S., with only rare exceptions. Some Medigap plans (C, D, F, G, M, N) include foreign travel emergency (typically 80% after a $250 deductible, up to $50,000 lifetime, and usually for the first 60 days of a trip). Some Medicare Advantage plans may offer limited worldwide emergency benefits—check your plan. Travel medical insurance is still recommended.
What is medical evacuation insurance?
It helps pay to transport you to the nearest adequate facility or, when allowed, back home in a serious emergency—often a separate or add-on benefit and strongly recommended for regions with limited care.
Are adventure or high-risk activities covered (skiing, scuba, climbing)?
Often excluded under standard plans unless you add a sport/adventure rider or buy a specialized policy. Always check activity lists and exclusions.
How are pre-existing conditions handled?
Policies can exclude them unless you meet waiver rules (commonly: buy within a set days-from-deposit window, insure 100% of prepaid nonrefundable costs, and be medically able to travel at purchase). Insurers must clearly disclose any pre-existing condition exclusions.
Are adventure or high-risk activities covered (skiing, scuba, climbing)?
Often excluded under standard plans unless you add a sport/adventure rider or buy a specialized policy. Always check activity lists and exclusions.
What’s the difference between trip cancellation and trip interruption?
Cancellation reimburses prepaid, nonrefundable costs if you can’t depart for a covered reason. Interruption reimburses unused portions (and extra return costs) if you must cut the trip short for a covered reason.
Are lost, stolen, or delayed bags covered?
Comprehensive policies typically reimburse for lost/damaged baggage and essentials during qualifying delays; baggage coverage is often secondary to other coverage (e.g., homeowners, airline).
Does travel insurance cover flight delays and extra expenses?
Yes—trip delay benefits can reimburse lodging, meals, ground transport, and rebooking after delays that meet the policy’s hour threshold and covered reasons.
Can I extend or modify coverage if my trip dates change?
Many policies allow date changes before departure, and some automatically extend coverage if your return is delayed by a covered reason; otherwise you may need to endorse or repurchase. Always confirm with your provider.
Do credit cards’ travel benefits replace a standalone policy?
Credit cards may include some trip protections, but limits and covered reasons vary widely and may not include medical or evacuation at adequate levels. Treat card benefits as a partial safety net, not a full substitute; read the benefit guide.
How much does travel insurance cost?
Typically about 4%–10% of total trip cost, depending on traveler age, trip price/length, destination, and selected benefits.
What is Cancel For Any Reason (CFAR) and is it worth it?
CFAR is an optional upgrade that lets you cancel for reasons not otherwise covered, usually reimbursing a percentage (often 50–75%) of prepaid costs if purchased within the plan’s time window and other conditions are met. It costs more but adds flexibility.