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Do I Need Travel Insurance in Canada?

Updated

Short Answer

For international travel — especially to the US — travel insurance is not optional for most Canadians. One medical emergency abroad can cost more than the average Canadian’s entire savings. The question is not whether to buy it, but whether your credit card provides enough, or whether you need to supplement.

Provincial Health Coverage Abroad: What You Actually Get

ProvinceOut-of-country daily hospital maximum
Ontario~$400/day
British Columbia~$75/day
AlbertaLimited emergency coverage
QuebecSmall per diem (not enough for US)
ManitobaLimited out-of-country

Real US hospital cost: $3,000–$10,000/night. Provincial coverage covers 1–13% of this.

Credit Card Travel Coverage: Know Your Limits

Coverage featureWhat to check on your card
Emergency medical limitIs it $1M, $5M, or $100K?
Maximum trip duration (days)15 days? 21 days? 60 days?
Pre-existing condition stability90 days stable? 180 days?
Must the trip be charged to the card?Usually yes — and often 100% of the cost
Trip cancellation limitUsually $1,500–$2,500 per person
Age cutoffMany cards limit medical coverage at age 65
Card tierTypical emergency medical coverageMax trip covered
Basic Visa/MC$0–$25,0000–10 days
Mid-range (Visa Infinite, World MC)$1–$2 million15 days
Premium (Amex Platinum, Visa Infinite Privilege)$5 million21–31 days

When to Buy Supplemental or Standalone Coverage

SituationAction
Trip longer than card’s coverage periodBuy top-up to extend duration
Pre-existing conditions not meeting stability clauseBuy specialized pre-existing conditions rider
Travelling to US for medical procedureBuy directly with explicit coverage confirmation
Aged 70+Card coverage often ends at 65–70; buy individually
Credit card covers only 15 days, trip is 21 daysBuy 6-day top-up gap policy
Cruise or remote expeditionBuy standalone with medical evacuation coverage

What Travel Insurance Covers by Type

Coverage typeWhat it includes
Emergency medicalHospital, surgery, doctors, ambulance, prescription drugs
Medical evacuationAir ambulance back to Canada — can cost $50,000–$200,000
Trip cancellationPre-departure cancellation due to covered reasons
Trip interruptionCutting a trip short due to medical or family emergency
Travel delayHotel, meals for significant delays
BaggageLost, stolen, or damaged luggage
Accidental death & dismembermentLump sum on death or severe injury during travel

Cost Guide: What Travel Insurance Costs

Trip / traveller profileEmergency medical onlyComprehensive
1 week US, age 35, healthy$25–$40$55–$90
2 weeks Europe, age 35, healthy$30–$50$65–$110
1 week US, age 65, healthy$80–$140$150–$250
1 week US, age 65, pre-existing conditions$180–$350$300–$550
Annual multi-trip, age 40, healthy$150–$250/year$250–$450/year

Travel to the US: Buy Coverage Every Time

Medical scenario in the USEstimated cost
Emergency room visit$3,000–$8,000
One night in hospital$5,000–$12,000
Appendectomy$30,000–$50,000
Heart attack, 5-day stay$100,000–$250,000
Air ambulance to Canada$25,000–$100,000

No credit card and no provincial health plan adequately covers these amounts. Buy coverage.

Bottom Line

For any international trip — especially to the US — emergency medical travel insurance is essential. Verify what your credit card actually covers (read the certificate of insurance, not the welcome guide), identify the gaps, and supplement or replace with a standalone policy when needed. For frequent travellers, an annual multi-trip policy is almost always the most cost-effective option.

What Canadian provincial health plans cover abroad

A common misconception: your provincial health card provides coverage when you travel internationally. In reality:

ProvinceOut-of-country emergency coverage
Ontario (OHIP)None (eliminated 2020)
BC (MSP)None (eliminated 2020)
Alberta (AHCIP)None
Quebec (RAMQ)Minimal ($75–$100/day hospital; $50/visit)
New BrunswickPartial (rates based on NB rates, not destination rates)
PEISome partial coverage

A single night in a US hospital commonly costs $5,000–$30,000. Provincial health insurance covers a fraction of this, if anything. Travel medical insurance is essential for trips to the US or anywhere outside Canada.

Types of travel insurance

TypeWhat it coversWho needs it
Emergency medicalHospital, emergency surgery, medevacEveryone traveling outside province
Trip cancellation/interruptionNon-refundable trip costs if you cancelAnyone with prepaid non-refundable travel
BaggageLost or delayed luggageOptional; useful for expensive trips
Travel accidentDeath/injury during travelUsually bundled
CFAR (cancel for any reason)Full flexibility, pre-departure onlyTravelers needing maximum flexibility

Frequently asked questions

Does my credit card travel insurance replace a travel insurance policy? Partially — many premium credit cards (Scotiabank Passport, TD Aeroplan Infinite, RBC Avion) include emergency medical, trip cancellation, and baggage insurance. Coverage limits and exclusions vary significantly. Check: maximum trip length covered (often 15–21 days), pre-existing condition exclusions, and whether you paid for the trip on the card. For longer trips or travelers with health conditions, supplementary coverage is often needed.

Do I need travel insurance for travel within Canada? Emergency medical is less critical within Canada since provincial health insurance provides coverage. However, trip cancellation insurance still protects non-refundable prepaid costs (flights, hotels, tours) against illness, injury, or other covered cancellation reasons.


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