When It’s Time to Consider Travel Insurance

Yes

There may be a line item in your travel budget you haven’t thought about—travel insurance. It may feel like an unnecessary expenditure, but if you’ve saved up for a dream vacation, the risk of not having the right travel insurance could run to the thousands of dollars if something goes wrong before or during your trip. But that doesn’t mean you should always purchase travel insurance. Here’s what you need to know to decide when and how much travel insurance to buy.

Plans

Most travel insurance is sold as a comprehensive plan with a variety of coverage, although some companies will allow you to customize a policy. Just like other insurance policies, most if not all parts will have a coverage limit—a maximum amount of money the company will pay out—and possibly a deductible you must first pay before coverage kicks in.

Below are common coverages within a comprehensive plan.

Trip cancellation, interruption, and delay

Loss of baggage and personal belongings

Emergency medical assistance, evacuation, and repatriation

Many travel insurance policies now include coverage for COVID-19-related issues. It's important to note that each policy is different, and coverage may vary depending on the specific policy and the insurance provider.

24-hour Assistance

Cost

According to the U.S. Travel Insurance Association, a comprehensive travel insurance plan will cost you 4% to 8% of the total cost of a trip. Factors affecting this price include trip length, overall trip cost, destination, pre-existing medical conditions, amount of coverage, and your age.

Where to get travel insurance

In addition to coverage from your existing car, health, and renters/homeowners insurance, you may also already have some travel insurance from the credit card you used to make your bookings and reservations. If the card doesn’t offer primary insurance for trip cancellation or car rental insurance, it probably offers secondary insurance—it’ll kick in and pay for damage or loss not covered by the primary insurance plan, i.e. car, health, renters/homeowners. And this coverage is free!

You can purchase travel insurance from your travel agent or through a travel booking site that you’ve used for tours—however, this source of insurance tends to be expensive, have thin coverage, and not allow you to customize the plan.

Or, you can go straight to a travel insurance company. You can buy directly from them or go through a travel insurance comparison website. This route gives you the most options for customization and policy prices, but it will require a little more time and effort to do the research.

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