A luxury hotel trip is a five-figure, largely non-refundable commitment, and insurance is how you protect it against the illness, weather and emergencies that no amount of planning prevents. The hard part is not whether to insure but what to buy: which coverage actually matters, when your credit card is already enough, and when to pay up for Cancel For Any Reason. This guide lays out the decision, with honest notes on where each option falls short.
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Which coverage actually matters?
Five things, in order of how much they protect you. Trip cancellation and interruption cover your non-refundable costs if a covered reason stops you travelling or cuts a trip short; emergency medical and evacuation cover treatment and getting you home, the coverage most travelers underestimate; and baggage covers lost or delayed belongings. The table below sets out what each does and how much it typically matters on a high-value hotel trip. For the framework on when a specific trip crosses the insure-it line, see our when to insure guide.
| Coverage | What it protects | Priority on a $5K+ trip |
|---|---|---|
| Trip cancellation | Non-refundable costs if you cancel for a covered reason | Essential |
| Emergency medical & evacuation | Treatment abroad and transport home | Essential (international) |
| Trip interruption | Costs if you leave early or arrive late | High |
| Baggage & delay | Lost, stolen or delayed belongings | Useful |
| Cancel For Any Reason (CFAR) | Cancelling for non-covered reasons (partial refund) | Optional, situational |
When should you buy travel insurance?
Almost always for non-refundable trips over about $5,000, and for any international travel. The math is straightforward: a comprehensive policy usually costs 4 to 8 percent of the trip price, so a few hundred dollars protects five figures of prepaid hotel, flight and tour spending you could otherwise lose entirely. International travel adds a second reason, most domestic US health plans, and Medicare, provide little or no coverage abroad, so the medical and evacuation benefit alone can justify the premium. Where you can reasonably skip it: a fully refundable domestic stay you could cancel yourself at no cost. Buy within 14 to 21 days of your first trip payment to unlock CFAR and pre-existing-condition waivers.
Is a credit card's travel insurance enough?
For shorter domestic trips, sometimes; for international or high-value trips, usually not. A premium card such as the Chase Sapphire Reserve includes trip cancellation and interruption up to $10,000 per traveler and $20,000 per trip, trip-delay cover of up to $500 per traveler after a delay of more than six hours, and lost-luggage reimbursement up to $3,000, provided you charge the trip to the card. That is genuinely useful and can cover a weekend charged in full. The catch is medical: the Sapphire Reserve's emergency medical benefit is around $2,500, a fraction of what an overseas hospital admission or air evacuation can cost, and cancellation limits can fall short on a truly expensive trip. Treat the card as a base layer and add a standalone policy for anything international or above its caps.
Which travel insurance is best in 2026?
The strongest broad choices are Allianz, Travelex and AIG Travel Guard, with Berkshire Hathaway Travel Protection worth a look for very high-value trips. In 2026 roundups Allianz is repeatedly rated best overall for its service and claims record and is a solid pick for frequent travelers via its annual plan; Travelex is a standout for families because its plans typically cover children at no extra cost; and AIG Travel Guard offers distinctive extras such as its MedEvac evacuation service and bundle add-ons, though some recent customer reviews flag slower claims handling, so weigh service alongside price. Rather than guess, compare quotes for your exact trip on a marketplace such as Squaremouth or InsureMyTrip, which show multiple insurers side by side. Whichever you choose, price it into the trip the way you would a flight, as covered in our hotel booking strategies guide.
Is Cancel For Any Reason worth it?
Only on expensive trips with real uncertainty, because it is the priciest add-on. CFAR lets you cancel for reasons a standard policy would reject, work, cold feet, a shifting schedule, and still recover typically 50 to 75 percent of your non-refundable costs, with Allianz's Cancel Anytime reaching up to 80 percent on eligible plans. The trade-offs are strict: it must usually be bought within 14 to 21 days of your first payment, you generally must insure the full trip cost, and it adds roughly 40 to 50 percent to the premium. For a $25,000 anniversary trip booked a year out with an uncertain work calendar, that is money well spent; for a firm two-night city stay, it is not. Weigh it against the actual refundability of your bookings.
How do you make a claim succeed?
Documentation, filed promptly. Claims are won or lost on paper, so keep everything: reservation confirmations, receipts for prepaid services, a doctor's note for any medical claim, and a police report for theft. File within the policy's window, which is short for some benefits, and be honest and precise, because denials most often turn on technicalities and missing evidence rather than bad faith. Our dedicated insurance claims strategy guide walks through the process in detail, including the documents to gather before you travel.
What drives the price of a policy?
Four things, mostly. Trip cost is the biggest lever, because premiums are priced as a percentage of the insured amount, so a $25,000 trip costs far more to cover than a $5,000 one; traveler age is the second, with premiums rising steeply past 60 as the medical risk climbs. Destination matters, since higher-cost medical regions and trips with adventure activities push the price up, and the coverage you choose, higher medical limits, CFAR, a pre-existing-condition waiver, adds to the base. Expect a comprehensive policy to land around 4 to 8 percent of trip cost, more with CFAR. The practical move is to insure the truly non-refundable portion of the trip rather than every dollar, and to get two or three quotes for identical coverage before you buy. For where insurance fits in the wider booking picture, see our booking strategies guide and the when to insure framework.
Five rules for insuring a luxury hotel trip
- Insure any non-refundable trip over about $5,000, and any international trip, without overthinking it.
- For international travel, treat emergency medical and evacuation as the non-negotiable coverage.
- Buy within 14 to 21 days of your first payment to keep CFAR and pre-existing-condition waivers on the table.
- Use a premium credit card as a base layer, but add a standalone policy for medical and high-value cancellation.
- Add CFAR only when plans are genuinely uncertain, and read the pre-existing-condition fine print.
Travel insurance, your questions answered
Do you need travel insurance for a luxury hotel trip?
Is a credit card's travel insurance enough for a luxury trip?
What is Cancel For Any Reason (CFAR) coverage?
When should you buy travel insurance?
This guide is general information, not insurance or financial advice. Coverage terms, limits and eligibility vary by policy, provider and state, and change over time. Read the full policy documents and confirm current details with the insurer before you buy.
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