Personal Finance

Domestic Vs International Travel Insurance: Understanding The Coverage Gap That Matters

The assumption that all travel insurance is broadly similar is one of the most expensive mistakes travellers often make.

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In a foreign country, reimbursement means paying upfront, often in large amounts. Cashless access isn’t a feature. It’s a necessity. Photo: AI Image
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Summary

Summary of this article

  • Domestic and international travel insurance aren’t lighter and heavier versions of the same product. They’re designed for entirely different realities.

  • Domestic travel insurance is helpful but not always necessary. On the other hand, international travel insurance is a must-have.

  • For frequent travellers, an annual multi-trip policy often makes more sense than buying insurance before every flight.

Not all travel insurance is built the same. And assuming it is, it can turn a small disruption into a large financial shock. Kavya had done everything right, or at least, everything she thought mattered - flights booked six months in advance. Visa approved. Itinerary neatly planned. Even the right adapters were packed. 

Insurance? That was a quick checkbox. She picked the cheapest “comprehensive” plan online, glanced at the premium, and moved on. Six days into her Thailand trip, a sudden medical emergency changed everything. Hospitalisation was unavoidable. The bill: Rs 6.8 lakh.

Her insurance covered Rs 2 lakh. “The assumption that all travel insurance is broadly similar is one of the most expensive mistakes travellers make,” says Sanjiv Bajaj, Jt Chairman and MD at BajajCapital Ltd. “Travel insurance isn’t about having a policy. It’s about having the right coverage for the environment you’re entering.”

The Difference Most People Don’t Realise

Domestic and international travel insurance aren’t lighter and heavier versions of the same product. They’re designed for entirely different realities. When you travel within India, you’re still inside a familiar system. Your health insurance works. Costs are predictable. Support systems exist, like family, language, and accessibility. The moment you step outside the country, that safety net disappears.

Medical systems are different. Costs are exponentially lower or higher depending on the country you are travelling to. Payments may need to be made upfront. And your domestic health policy? It typically doesn’t apply.

Venkatesh Naidu, CEO at BajajCapital Insurance Broking Ltd., explains, “Domestic travel insurance is largely about inconvenience like delays, cancellations, baggage loss. International travel insurance is about financial protection in an unfamiliar system. The risk itself changes, so the solution must change with it.”

What Actually Changes in Coverage

The difference becomes clearer when you look at what each policy is designed to cover.

Medical cover - Domestic plans offer limited support because your existing health policy is expected to step in. International plans make medical coverage the core, often ranging from USD 50,000 to USD 500,000.

Emergency evacuation - Rarely relevant domestically. However, very important in other countries, especially where treatment may require moving. In India, losing a passport and being responsible for it are not issues. Major risks abroad.

Repatriation support – Rarely included domestically. Standard in most international policies.

In short, domestic insurance protects your trip. International insurance protects your finances.

When You Actually Need Each One

Domestic travel insurance is helpful but not always necessary. If your trip includes expensive, non-refundable bookings, tight connections, or adventure activities, it is worth having. Otherwise, your current health insurance usually covers the main risks. On the other hand, international travel insurance is a must-have.

A minor hospital visit in the US, Europe, or even Southeast Asia can cost several lakhs. Without adequate coverage, that expense comes directly out of your pocket. “Skipping international travel insurance to save Rs 1,500 is a false economy,” says Naidu. “The premium is small. The downside risk is not.”

Five Things Worth Checking Before You Buy

Most claim issues don’t come from rejection. They come from under-coverage. A few checks can prevent that.

1. Medical cover limit (in foreign currency)

A Rs 5-lakh cover may sound sufficient until you realise global healthcare costs don’t work in rupees. For developed countries, USD 100,000 is a practical baseline.

2. Cashless network availability

In a foreign country, reimbursement means paying upfront, often in large amounts. Cashless access isn’t a feature. It’s a necessity.

3. Pre-existing condition clauses

Most plans only cover emergency stabilisation, not treatment. If you have a condition, read this carefully.

4. Adventure activity coverage

Trekking, diving, skiing - all are commonly excluded unless added separately.

5. Visa-specific requirements

For Europe, for instance, Schengen visas require minimum coverage thresholds. Not all plans automatically qualify.

“The three biggest mistakes we see are buying purely on price, ignoring sub-limits, and assuming existing health insurance will cover international travel,” adds Naidu. “Almost every problematic claim can be traced back to one of these assumptions.”

The Smarter Way to Think About It

For frequent travellers, an annual multi-trip policy often makes more sense than buying insurance before every flight. It reduces friction and ensures you’re never travelling uninsured because you forgot. For families, floater travel plans can reduce costs, provided everyone is travelling together. But the real shift isn’t in the product, it’s in the mindset.

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