Travel insurance is one of those topics where bad advice costs serious money. Either you buy a stack of redundant coverage you already have through your credit card, or you skip the one policy that would have covered the $85,000 medical evacuation flight from Costa Rica. Neither outcome is good.
This is a breakdown of what actually matters, what you already have, and how to plug the real gaps.
The Coverage Types: What They Are and What They Actually Do
Trip Cancellation and Interruption
Reimburses non-refundable trip costs if you have to cancel or cut short a trip due to covered reasons: illness, death of a family member, natural disasters, jury duty. Standard policies cover 100% of cancellation costs and up to 150% for interruption (to cover the cost of getting home early). This is the most commonly purchased coverage and, for most domestic trips, the most commonly redundant one.
Medical Coverage
Pays for medical treatment if you get sick or injured while traveling. This is the gap most people do not think about until they need it. Your domestic health insurance (including most employer plans) often provides little to no coverage outside the US. Medicare does not cover international care at all. If you travel internationally even a few times a year, you need this.
Medical Evacuation
Airlifts you to the nearest adequate medical facility or back home if needed. Separate from medical coverage. This is the one that will bankrupt you if you skip it. An air ambulance from Southeast Asia or South America to the US can run $50,000 to $200,000 out of pocket. No one thinks they will need it until they do.
Travel Delay
Covers meals, lodging, and incidental expenses when your trip is delayed beyond a certain threshold (usually 6 to 12 hours) due to covered reasons like weather or mechanical issues. Useful, but often covered by your credit card.
Lost or Delayed Baggage
Reimburses you for lost, stolen, or delayed luggage. Again: often covered by your credit card and by the airline itself under DOT rules for domestic flights.
Rental Car Coverage
Covers damage to a rental vehicle. Your personal auto insurance may cover this, and most premium travel cards do too. Buying this at the rental counter is almost always a waste of money.
What Your Credit Card Already Covers
If you carry an Amex Platinum or Chase Sapphire Reserve, you are already covered for more than you probably realize. Here is the short version:
Chase Sapphire Reserve:
- Trip cancellation/interruption: up to $10,000 per person, $20,000 per trip
- Trip delay: up to $500 per ticket after 6-hour delay
- Baggage delay: up to $100/day for 5 days
- Lost luggage: up to $3,000 per passenger
- Primary rental car coverage: up to $75,000
- Emergency evacuation: up to $100,000
Amex Platinum:
- Trip cancellation/interruption: up to $10,000 per trip
- Trip delay: up to $500 per covered trip after 6 hours
- Baggage insurance: up to $3,000 for checked bags
- Premium Global Assist Hotline: emergency coordination, but not full medical evacuation reimbursement
The key takeaway: if you charged the trip to one of these cards, you likely do not need a standalone policy for trip cancellation, delay, or baggage. The gap is medical coverage and full evacuation benefits for international travel.
Check our rundown of the best business credit cards for travel rewards to make sure you are on the right card before you even think about buying extra insurance.
When Standalone Travel Insurance Actually Makes Sense
Buy a standalone policy when:
- You are traveling internationally, especially to regions with limited medical infrastructure
- You have a pre-existing condition that a credit card policy would exclude
- The trip cost exceeds your card’s cancellation limits
- You are doing adventure activities (hiking, diving, motorcycling) that standard policies exclude
- You want “cancel for any reason” coverage, which lets you cancel up to 48 hours before departure for a partial refund regardless of the reason
Annual Multi-Trip vs. Per-Trip Policies
If you travel for business more than three or four times a year internationally, an annual multi-trip policy almost always wins on cost. A per-trip policy for a 5-day international trip might run $80 to $150. An annual plan from a provider like Allianz or AIG covers unlimited trips (up to a per-trip day limit, usually 30 to 90 days) for $300 to $600 per year.
Do the math on your travel schedule. Most entrepreneurs who read this are hitting that break-even point by their third international trip of the year.
The Providers Worth Knowing
Allianz Travel Insurance
The largest travel insurer in the US. Strong annual plans for frequent travelers. AllTrips Premier is the flagship product for business travelers who want comprehensive coverage without buying per-trip. Claims process is reliable, customer service is solid.
World Nomads
Strong for adventure travel and international trips. Covers a wide range of activities that other insurers exclude. Flexible: you can buy or extend coverage while already traveling. Popular with entrepreneurs who blend business and extended international stays.
AIG Travel Guard
Reliable, comprehensive plans with strong medical and evacuation coverage. The Preferred and Deluxe plans are the ones to look at for business travelers who want high limits. Good for higher-value trips where the cancellation coverage ceiling matters.
The Medical Evacuation Scenario: Why You Never Skip This Internationally
Here is the scenario that plays out more often than people think: you are in Southeast Asia, rural Latin America, or sub-Saharan Africa for a business meeting or site visit. You have a serious medical emergency, whether it is a cardiac event, a bad accident, or a condition that requires specialized surgery. The local hospital cannot adequately treat you. You need to be airlifted to Bangkok, Singapore, or back to the US.
The cost of a medical evacuation flight: $50,000 to $200,000. The cost of medical evacuation coverage through a solid annual policy: $300 to $600 per year. The math is not complicated.
Even MedJet Assist, which is purely a medical transport membership (not insurance), costs around $350 per year and guarantees transport to your home hospital if you are admitted more than 150 miles from home. This is worth having on top of a standard travel insurance policy for frequent international travelers.
By the Numbers
- Average medical evacuation from Asia to the US: $100,000 to $200,000
- Average annual multi-trip travel insurance policy: $300 to $600
- Chase Sapphire Reserve emergency evacuation limit: $100,000
- Percentage of US health insurance plans with no international coverage: majority of domestic HMO and EPO plans
- Cancel for any reason upgrade cost: typically 40 to 50% more than base policy
While you are building out your travel infrastructure, make sure your flight booking strategy is equally dialed in. Our guide to booking business travel on a budget without sacrificing time walks through how to get the routing right before the insurance question even comes up.
Quick Decision Framework
- Domestic trip, premium card, short duration: Your card likely covers it. Skip the standalone policy.
- International trip, any duration: Buy at minimum medical and evacuation coverage. Check your card benefits first.
- International trip with adventure activities or pre-existing conditions: World Nomads or a specialized plan with specific endorsements.
- Three or more international trips per year: Annual multi-trip policy. Almost always the better value.
- High-value trip (over $10,000 in non-refundable costs): Standalone cancellation policy with cancel-for-any-reason rider if available.
Key Takeaways
- Most trip cancellation, delay, and baggage coverage is already in your premium travel card. Stop buying it twice.
- Medical and evacuation coverage is the real gap. Your domestic health insurance often does not cover you abroad.
- A medical evacuation can cost six figures. Annual coverage costs less than a business dinner.
- Annual multi-trip policies beat per-trip pricing after your third international trip of the year.
- Allianz, World Nomads, and AIG Travel Guard are the names worth knowing. Compare plans on your specific itinerary before buying.
- Cancel for any reason is worth the premium if flexibility matters and your trip cost is high.
Sources and Further Reading
- Squaremouth: Travel Insurance Comparison Tool
- InsureMyTrip: Independent Travel Insurance Marketplace
- CMS.gov: Medicare and Overseas Coverage
- US State Department: Insurance Providers for Overseas Coverage
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