Most standard travel insurance policies cap coverage at 30, 45, or 90 days — far short of what long-term travelers need. A gap year student, a retiree spending winter in Southeast Asia, or a professional on a six-month sabbatical needs insurance that stays active for the duration of the trip. Long-stay insurance is purpose-built for these travelers, offering continuous coverage with no arbitrary end date and the flexibility to extend as plans evolve.
The key difference between a long-stay policy and a short-trip policy is how medical coverage works over time. On a long stay, you are significantly more likely to need routine or non-emergency medical care — a dental issue, a recurring condition, or a course of prescription medication. Long-stay policies are more likely to include provisions for these situations, while still maintaining core emergency medical and evacuation coverage. Look for policies that cover telemedicine, as this dramatically reduces the cost and hassle of accessing healthcare in unfamiliar countries.
Trip interruption coverage takes on different significance for long-stay travelers. If you are six months into a year-long trip and a family emergency requires you to return home immediately, a good policy covers the cost of an emergency flight and helps you resume your trip later without losing pre-paid accommodation or tours. When comparing policies, check both the interruption coverage amount and whether the policy can be paused and resumed when you return home for a visit.
Always read the fine print — coverage limits and exclusion clauses vary significantly between providers and plan tiers.
Subscription-based monthly billing with no maximum trip length makes it ideal for open-ended long-term travel
Excellent long-stay coverage with high medical limits and no defined end date — cancel anytime with monthly billing
Offers policies up to 180 days with the ability to extend online while already traveling, including adventure activity coverage
Find the right coverage for your trip.
This varies significantly by insurer. SafetyWing and Genki have no defined maximum — you pay monthly and cancel when you return home. World Nomads covers up to 180 days per policy, extendable online. Some specialist long-stay insurers offer up to 18 or 24 months.
SafetyWing and Genki both allow you to purchase a policy while already abroad, though there is typically a 1–3 day waiting period before coverage begins. World Nomads does not allow purchase after departure. Check each insurer's terms before buying.
Most long-stay policies focus on emergency and unexpected medical care. Routine check-ups, elective procedures, and pre-existing conditions are generally excluded or limited. Some premium plans (like Genki's higher tiers) include broader coverage for non-emergency care.
This depends on the policy. SafetyWing allows up to 30 days in your home country per 90-day period without losing coverage. Genki allows unlimited home country visits. World Nomads pauses coverage during home country stays. Always verify the home country clause before purchasing.
Make sure you are actually covered — our checklist reveals the gaps most travelers miss.
Free download. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.