Digital nomads face unique insurance challenges that traditional travel policies simply weren't built to handle. Standard travel insurance assumes a defined departure and return date, a single destination, and no work activity — none of which apply to the modern remote worker spending six months in Southeast Asia, then a few months in Europe. Purpose-built nomad insurance fills this gap with rolling monthly coverage, no fixed itinerary requirements, and global medical protection.
The most critical coverage for nomads is emergency medical and evacuation. Healthcare quality varies enormously across nomad hotspots, and a serious illness or accident in a country with poor medical infrastructure could require a costly medical evacuation to a better-equipped facility or back to your home country. Policies like SafetyWing and Genki include evacuation coverage up to $100,000–$500,000, which can be the difference between a manageable incident and financial ruin. Beyond medical, look for coverage of your work gear — a stolen laptop in Bali or a broken camera in Lisbon is a real occupational hazard.
When selecting a digital nomad policy, pay close attention to home country rules. Some policies allow visits home for up to 30–45 days per year without cancelling coverage; others terminate the moment you return. Also check whether the policy covers pre-existing conditions (most basic plans exclude them), and whether it includes a telemedicine benefit — invaluable when you need a prescription refilled in a country where you don't speak the language.
Always read the fine print — coverage limits and exclusion clauses vary significantly between providers and plan tiers.
Purpose-built for nomads with affordable monthly pricing and global coverage including home country visits every 30 days
High coverage limits, excellent telemedicine, and designed specifically for long-term travelers and remote workers
Strong equipment coverage and a highly rated app for managing claims while on the road
Find the right coverage for your trip.
Many nomads do use it as their sole health coverage while abroad, but it is not a substitute for domestic health insurance in most countries. SafetyWing and Genki are designed for this use case, though they exclude coverage in your home country beyond short visits.
It depends on the policy. Heymondo and some World Nomads plans include electronics coverage. SafetyWing's basic Nomad Insurance does not cover gear, but their Remote Health plan does. Always check the policy schedule for electronics sub-limits.
Most nomad policies allow brief home country visits — typically 15 to 45 days per policy period — without terminating coverage. SafetyWing allows up to 30 days in your home country per 90-day period. Exceeding this limit may void your coverage.
Coverage is accepted worldwide, but direct billing arrangements vary. In some cases you will pay upfront and submit a claim for reimbursement. Genki and SafetyWing both have 24/7 emergency assistance lines to help coordinate care and payment with providers.
Make sure you are actually covered — our checklist reveals the gaps most travelers miss.
Free download. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.