Travel insurance covers what your booking's cancellation policy can't: medical emergencies abroad, lost luggage, trip interruption, missed connections, and the unexpected events that turn a great trip into a financial mess. Here's how to protect yours.
Travel insurance is a policy you buy before your trip that pays out when specific things go wrong: a medical emergency abroad, your luggage gets lost, you miss a connection, your trip is interrupted, or you have to cancel for a covered reason. It's separate from the cancellation policy on your booking.
A broken ankle in Thailand, food poisoning in Mexico, an accident in the Alps. Your home health insurance usually doesn't work outside your country. Travel insurance pays for hospital care, doctor visits, and emergency evacuation.
Airlines lose 1 in 200 bags. If yours doesn't arrive, travel insurance covers replacement clothes, toiletries, and essentials while you wait. If it's permanently lost, you get reimbursed for the value of contents.
You get sick, a family member needs surgery, your employer demands you stay. Travel insurance reimburses non-refundable costs (flights, tours, hotels) when you cancel for a covered reason. Most policies cover 10-15 specific reasons.
Your first flight is delayed, you miss the connection, you have to book a new flight and hotel. Travel insurance covers the extra costs, including meals and overnight accommodation if your trip is significantly disrupted.
Hurricane shuts down your destination. Volcano cancels your flights. Major storm wipes out the tour you booked. Travel insurance covers cancellations and interruptions caused by named perils (specific events listed in the policy).
Beyond just paying out claims, travel insurance gives you a 24/7 helpline. Lost passport, need a doctor, family emergency back home, need help arranging evacuation. Real humans on the phone, in your language, around the clock.
Travel insurance isn't unlimited. Every policy has a list of covered situations and a list of exclusions. Here's the general pattern. Specific policies vary, so always check yours.
| Typically covered | Typically NOT covered | |
|---|---|---|
| Medical | Hospital, doctor visits, emergency evacuation, prescription refills, dental emergencies | Pre-existing conditions (unless waiver purchased), routine check-ups, cosmetic procedures |
| Trip cancellation | Illness, injury, family emergency, jury duty, employer requirement, named natural disasters | "I changed my mind" (unless CFAR purchased), fear of travel, business cancellation without proof |
| Luggage | Lost, stolen, damaged, or delayed bags; essential items during delays | Cash, jewelry over policy limit, electronics without proof of purchase, items left unattended |
| Flight issues | Missed connections, significant delays, cancellations, interruption mid-trip | Strikes you knew about before booking, weather you knew about before booking |
| Personal liability | Accidental injury to others, accidental property damage during your trip | Intentional acts, alcohol-related incidents, extreme sports without specific add-on |
| Activities | Standard tourist activities (sightseeing, day tours, walking, hiking on marked trails) | Extreme sports (scuba, climbing, motorcycle, off-piste skiing) without adventure rider |
| War & civil unrest | Some policies cover unexpected outbreaks; evacuation costs may be included | Travel to countries with active war/advisories at time of booking; acts of terrorism varies |
| Pandemics | Medical care if you catch a disease abroad; some policies cover cancellation if you test positive | Travel restrictions, lockdowns, fear of catching disease, vaccination requirements |
When you check out on BookingRadar, you'll see two protection options: Refund Protect (offered by Protect Group on individual bookings) and external travel insurance. They cover different things. Here's how to choose.
Honest take: for most international trips longer than 3 days, get travel insurance. For individual day tours or transfers, Refund Protect at checkout often makes more sense. Many smart travelers buy both: travel insurance for the trip overall, Refund Protect on specific bookings where they want extra flexibility.
Domestic trips need less coverage. International trips need at least basic medical. Trips to remote regions (parts of Asia, Africa, South America) should include emergency evacuation, which is expensive to add later.
Single-trip policies cover one trip. Annual policies cover unlimited trips up to a max duration (often 30-60 days each). If you travel 3+ times a year, annual usually costs less.
Sightseeing and city breaks need basic coverage. Hiking, skiing, scuba, motorcycle tours, climbing all need adventure or extreme sports add-ons. Read the activities list carefully before buying.
Cancellation coverage should match your non-refundable costs. If you've spent $5,000 on flights, hotels, and tours, you need at least $5,000 in cancellation coverage. Round up to the nearest tier.
Solo, couple, family with kids, group of friends. Family plans often cost less than individual policies for groups. Some policies don't cover travelers over 75 or have age-based limits on adventure activities.
If you have a medical condition (diabetes, heart issue, mental health diagnosis), most policies exclude it unless you buy a pre-existing condition waiver within 14-21 days of your first trip deposit. Don't wait.
Traveler slips on hotel stairs, breaks tibia. Hospital, surgery, 4-night stay, flight home in business class for leg elevation. Insurance paid 100%, traveler paid $0.
Airline lost both checked bags on a 10-day Italy trip. Insurance reimbursed for replacement clothes, toiletries, and contents value. Bags eventually returned 2 weeks later.
2 days before departure, traveler diagnosed with appendicitis, emergency surgery required. Non-refundable flights, hotels, and tour bookings reimbursed in full.
First flight delayed 4 hours. Missed international connection. Insurance covered new flight, overnight hotel, meals, and a missed tour booking at destination.
For domestic day trips, probably not. For international trips of any length, yes. A single emergency room visit abroad can cost $5,000-$50,000 out of pocket, far more than the policy itself. The math almost always favors having insurance. Even a $50 policy beats a $20,000 hospital bill.
Within 14-21 days of your first trip deposit, whichever your specific policy requires. This window is critical for two reasons: pre-existing condition waivers are usually only available during this period, and cancellation coverage starts the day you buy the policy. Buy later and you lose protection for anything that happens before purchase date.
Some premium credit cards include limited travel insurance (Chase Sapphire, Amex Platinum, certain Visa Signature cards). Coverage is often limited: low medical caps, restricted to trips charged to that card, exclusions for adventure activities. Read your card's benefits guide carefully. For most travelers, credit card coverage is a useful supplement, not a replacement for a real policy.
CFAR is an add-on that lets you cancel for literally any reason and get partial reimbursement (typically 50-75% of non-refundable costs). It costs 30-50% more than standard policies. Worth it if your trip is expensive, your plans are uncertain, or you might cancel for reasons not on the standard covered list (changed your mind, work conflict, didn't feel like going). Standard policies require a specific covered reason.
Document everything from the moment something goes wrong. Receipts, photos, medical reports, police reports for theft, airline confirmations for delays. Contact your insurer's 24/7 line ASAP, ideally before incurring major costs. File the formal claim within the policy's deadline (typically 30-90 days). Most modern insurers have online claim portals that pay faster than mail-in claims. Honesty matters: fraudulent claims are easy to detect and result in policy cancellation.
Yes, with a pre-existing condition waiver, but you usually must buy it within 14-21 days of your first trip deposit. The waiver waives the look-back period (typically 60-180 days before purchase) during which any medical treatment, medication change, or doctor visit could disqualify you. Without the waiver, anything related to that condition is excluded. If you have ongoing health issues, buy insurance immediately after booking your first trip component.
Standard policies cover normal tourist activities like sightseeing, walking tours, swimming, snorkeling, and hiking on marked trails. They typically exclude: scuba diving below 30m, technical climbing, motorcycle/scooter riding, off-piste skiing, bungee jumping, skydiving, white-water rafting class IV+, and similar. If you'll do any of these, buy an adventure or extreme sports rider. Cost: usually $20-100 added to the policy. Worth it.
We're currently finalizing partnerships with leading travel insurance providers to offer policies directly at checkout. Until that's live, we recommend you compare policies through trusted comparison sites (InsureMyTrip, Squaremouth, Travel Insurance Master) and buy from a licensed provider in your home country. If you want guidance on which policy fits your specific trip, reach out to our team and we'll point you in the right direction.
After two decades in travel, the pattern is clear. Travelers who buy insurance forget they have it. Travelers who don't buy it remember the moment they regretted it for years. The math always favors being protected. Especially internationally.

Tell us where you're going and what you're booking. Our team will recommend the right policy options for your specific trip, source markets, and activities.
Already know what you need? Visit our help center →