The booking page asks if you want to protect your trip, and adding the policy feels like the responsible thing to do. It’s almost never the right financial move. Travel insurance is one of the highest-margin products attached to leisure spending, and for the typical domestic vacation it covers risks that are either small, already covered elsewhere, or excluded by the fine print.
What you’re really paying for
A standard travel insurance policy bundles trip cancellation, trip interruption, medical coverage abroad, baggage loss, and emergency evacuation. Premiums typically run 4 to 10 percent of trip cost, which means a five thousand dollar trip carries a two hundred to five hundred dollar policy. The actuarial math is simple. Insurers price these products to be profitable across all customers, which means the average buyer pays more than they recover. Most claims fall in the trip cancellation bucket, and most cancellations come from reasons explicitly excluded, change of mind, work pressure, fear of weather, fear of illness without diagnosis, or any pandemic situation that wasn’t bought as a separate rider. The covered reasons are narrower than the brochure suggests.
Coverage you probably already have
Premium credit cards routinely include trip cancellation, trip interruption, baggage delay, and rental car coverage when the trip is paid on the card. Health insurance, including Medicare in some cases, covers domestic medical emergencies anywhere in the country. Homeowners and renters insurance often covers personal property stolen during travel, subject to deductible. Stacking duplicate coverage doesn’t pay double, it just means you wasted the second premium. The high-yield use case for travel insurance is international travel, where U.S. health insurance often doesn’t apply and emergency evacuation can run into six figures. For a domestic trip on a decent credit card, most of the policy is already in your wallet.
The case where it actually makes sense
International travel, especially to remote destinations, is where the calculus flips. Medical evacuation from a cruise, a mountain region, or a developing country can easily cost fifty thousand to two hundred thousand dollars. A small premium against a catastrophic, low-probability cost is the textbook definition of insurance that pays. Cancel-for-any-reason riders are also worth considering on expensive non-refundable trips with significant prepaid costs, since they provide the flexibility the standard policy explicitly denies. Pre-existing condition waivers matter for anyone with a chronic illness, but they have purchase windows, typically within 14 to 21 days of initial deposit. Trip cost concentration matters too. A one thousand dollar weekend doesn’t justify insurance. A twenty thousand dollar anniversary trip with significant nonrefundable bookings might.
The bottom line
Travel insurance is theater for a quick domestic getaway and a sensible hedge for an expensive international one. The decision should follow the actual exposure, the destination’s healthcare system, and what your existing cards and policies already provide. Buying it reflexively because it’s offered at checkout is paying for peace of mind that, for most trips, you could have gotten free by reading what you already had.
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