A passport resting on a world map

Travel Insurance: Do You Really Need It?

Travel insurance feels like an upsell you can skip — until a hospital visit abroad costs more than your whole trip. The honest answer to “do I need it?” is: for international travel, almost always yes; for cheap domestic trips, usually no. What you’re really buying is protection against the rare, expensive disaster — not the minor stuff. Here’s how to decide, and what to actually check before you pay. This is general information, not financial advice, and policy terms vary — always read the wording.

What it actually protects against

Good travel insurance isn’t about getting reimbursed for a delayed bag — it’s about the catastrophic stuff that could wipe out your savings. The big one is medical emergencies abroad, where a single hospitalisation can run into lakhs without cover. After that come trip cancellation, medical evacuation, and lost passports. Think of it the way you’d think of any insurance: you’re paying a small, known cost to avoid a rare, ruinous one — the same logic as a regular health insurance policy.

When you probably need it

  • Any international trip. Foreign medical costs are the main reason; some countries also require proof of cover for a visa.
  • Expensive or prepaid trips. If cancelling would mean losing a lot of non-refundable money, cancellation cover earns its keep.
  • Adventure or remote travel. Trekking, diving, or far-flung places where evacuation would be costly and complicated.

When you can probably skip it

For a cheap domestic trip where your existing health cover already works and you’ve booked little in advance, the math often doesn’t favour a separate policy. The potential loss is small enough to self-insure — which is exactly what your emergency fund is for. Insurance is worth it when the downside is bigger than you could comfortably absorb; below that line, skipping it is reasonable.

What to check before you buy

  1. Medical cover amount — high enough for the country you’re visiting (medical costs vary wildly by destination).
  2. Exclusions — pre-existing conditions, adventure sports, and alcohol-related incidents are commonly excluded. Read these.
  3. Cashless network or reimbursement — know whether you pay upfront and claim later, and keep all receipts.
  4. The excess (deductible) — the part you pay per claim. A low premium with a huge excess may not be the bargain it looks like.

Insurance is one line in a trip’s budget. Plan the rest with our cornerstone budget travel playbook, and save on the big costs with our guide to finding flight deals.

FAQ

Is travel insurance worth it?

For international trips it usually is, mainly because of the cost of medical emergencies abroad. For cheap domestic trips with little prepaid, you can often skip it and rely on your emergency fund.

What does travel insurance not cover?

Commonly excluded items include undeclared pre-existing conditions, adventure sports, incidents involving alcohol, and losses you can’t document. Always read the exclusions before buying.

When should I buy it?

Soon after booking, so cancellation cover applies if something goes wrong before you travel. Buying at the last minute means you miss that window of protection.

Smart travel is mostly about planning ahead. Start with our cornerstone budget travel playbook, or browse more Travel guides.

Keep reading on Super Rat Machine

All articles

Scroll to Top