Travel insurance is not a single product — it is a bundle of different types of coverage sold together under one policy. Understanding what each component covers (and what it excludes) is essential to choosing a policy that actually protects you. The core components found in most comprehensive travel insurance policies are emergency medical and hospitalization, trip cancellation and interruption, baggage and personal belongings, and travel delay and missed connection.
Emergency medical coverage pays for unexpected illness or injury treatment while you are abroad. This is the most financially significant coverage in the policy — a serious accident or illness in the United States, for example, can result in a hospital bill exceeding $100,000, and even in countries with lower medical costs, emergency surgery and hospitalization can quickly reach tens of thousands of dollars. Good policies include emergency medical evacuation and repatriation, which covers the cost of transporting you to an appropriate medical facility (or home) if local care is insufficient. Medical coverage limits range from $50,000 on budget policies to $1 million or more on comprehensive plans — for travel to the US or countries with high medical costs, higher limits are strongly advisable.
Trip cancellation coverage reimburses your non-refundable prepaid trip costs if you have to cancel before departure for a covered reason. Covered reasons typically include your own illness or injury, the death or serious illness of a close family member, jury duty, redundancy, and natural disasters at your destination. It does not cover cancellation due to changing your mind, work obligations (unless specified), or fear of travel. Trip interruption covers the same situations but applies when you have to cut a trip short after it has started — reimbursing unused trip costs and the cost of an emergency flight home.
Baggage coverage pays for lost, stolen, or damaged luggage and personal belongings. This section typically has low overall limits (commonly $1,000–$2,500) with sub-limits per item (often $200–$500 per item). High-value electronics, jewelry, and cameras are frequently excluded or capped at levels far below their replacement cost. Travel delay pays a daily benefit when your trip is delayed beyond a threshold (commonly 6 or 12 hours) due to weather, mechanical failure, or similar causes. What travel insurance does not cover is equally important to understand: pre-existing conditions (unless specifically covered), high-risk activities without add-ons, travel to countries under government advisory, incidents caused by alcohol or drug use, and losses that are not properly documented and reported.
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Travel insurance covers trip cancellation — your non-refundable costs if you have to cancel your trip for a covered reason. It does not cover airline-caused flight cancellations in the same way; airlines are legally required to provide refunds or alternative flights for cancellations they cause. Travel delay coverage does provide daily benefits if a flight cancellation delays your trip by the policy's threshold.
Most policies now treat COVID-19 as a known event and do not cover cancellation simply because you want to avoid travel. However, many policies cover COVID-19 medical expenses if you fall ill abroad, and some cover cancellation if you test positive within a set period before departure. Check the specific COVID-19 clause in any policy you consider.
Key exclusions include: pre-existing medical conditions (unless declared and covered via waiver), high-risk activities without an adventure add-on, travel against government advice, self-inflicted injuries, losses due to alcohol or drug use, undocumented claims, and theft from unattended vehicles or in your checked baggage.
For travel within Europe with an EHIC/GHIC card, $100,000 is often sufficient. For travel to the United States, Canada, Australia, or anywhere with high private medical costs, $500,000 to $1 million is advisable. Medical evacuation from a remote or developing country can cost $50,000–$100,000 alone, so policies that include evacuation coverage are important for off-the-beaten-path travel.
Some comprehensive travel insurance policies include rental car collision damage as an optional add-on or standalone benefit. However, this is not standard in most policies. Dedicated rental car excess insurance (often available from specialist providers) is usually a more cost-effective solution than relying on travel insurance for this coverage.
Make sure you are actually covered — our checklist reveals the gaps most travelers miss.
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