Adventure coverage
Bungee jumping travel insurance — cover for the one big jump abroad
Bungee jumping is a named hazardous activity that most standard and credit-card travel policies exclude — one jump on an otherwise ordinary trip can void a claim. Expedition Insure quotes plans that name the activity in their schedule: bungy jumps at Nevis or Queenstown, the swing at Victoria Falls, Macau Tower, canyon swings, and adventure-park combos, with emergency medical and evacuation sized to where you are jumping.
Reviewed by Al Ste-Marie, Founder, Expedition Insure. Last updated June 2026.
What bungee jumping travel insurance must cover
For most travelers, a bungee jump is a single high-adrenaline moment on an otherwise normal trip — a bucket-list item ticked off on a holiday that is, in every other respect, ordinary. That is exactly why the coverage trap is easy to miss. You insure the trip, you assume you are covered, and the one activity you most want protection for is the one the policy quietly excludes.
At a minimum, look for: the activity itself named in the included schedule (bungee jumping, bungy jumping, or “high-adrenaline activities”), emergency medical expense with primary payment, a medical evacuation limit sized to the jump location, repatriation, and trip cancellation and interruption for the full insured trip cost. If you are combining the jump with canyon swings, giant swings, or an adventure park, confirm each of those activities separately. Activity exclusions are where consumer policies fail adventure travelers — read the schedule, not the brochure.
Why bungee jumping is excluded by most policies
Travel insurers classify activities by risk. Bungee jumping, along with skydiving, BASE jumping, and similar free-fall activities, sits in the hazardous or extreme-sports tier that the median consumer policy is not priced to carry. So it goes in the exclusions schedule by default, and the only way to get it back is an adventure or extreme-sports upgrade, an activity add-on, or a policy written to include it.
The practical risk is the gap between perception and the policy wording. A traveler who books a comprehensive plan for a two-week trip reasonably assumes a single jump is part of the holiday it covers. It usually is not. And because the exclusion attaches to the activity, a denied claim is not limited to the jump itself — a medical event, an evacuation, or an injury connected to the excluded activity can fall outside cover too.
For activity and ride safety standards, see the ASTM International amusement-ride and adventure standards, and the US State Department’s your health abroad guidance.
The single-jump scenario most travelers get wrong
The classic case is not the dedicated adventure-sports traveler — it is the person on a standard holiday who does one jump. A honeymoon in Queenstown, a stopover at Victoria Falls, a city break in Macau. The jump is a few minutes out of a two-week itinerary, and it is the only thing on that itinerary the policy excludes.
- Activity exclusion. Bungee jumping is named in the schedule of most standard and credit-card policies. The exclusion is in the wording, not the brochure.
- The waiver confusion. Signing the operator’s liability waiver at the platform is unrelated to your insurance. It is not coverage, and it does not void cover you actually hold.
- Location variance. Operator standards, platform height, and rescue infrastructure vary by country. A serious injury abroad can require evacuation and repatriation that a $50,000 medical limit will not cover.
The fix is simple: confirm the activity is named in the policy schedule before you jump, and size the medical and evacuation limits to where you are jumping — not to the city-break default.
Standard policy vs adventure-grade bungee cover
A handful of line items separate a policy that pays a bungee-related claim from one that excludes it. This is exactly what we check on every adventure quote.
| Coverage element | Typical standard policy | Adventure-grade (bungee & swings) |
|---|---|---|
| Bungee jumping as a named activity | Listed in the exclusions schedule | Named in the included activity schedule |
| Canyon swings, giant swings, adventure-park combos | Frequently excluded as “adventure activities” | Inside the activity schedule when named |
| Medical evacuation limit | $50k–$100k, often capped | Sized to the jump location, including air ambulance and repatriation |
| Emergency medical payment | Often excess (pays after your home plan) | Primary payment, no home-plan precondition |
| Effect of the operator waiver | Often misunderstood as coverage | Treated correctly: a liability release, separate from your insurance |
| Trip cancellation & interruption | Included, but voided if the trigger is an excluded activity | Full insured trip cost, consistent with the covered activities |
General comparison of common market patterns, not a guarantee of any specific policy. Always read the certificate of insurance for your quoted plan.
Travel insurance by the numbers
Travel insurance is the rare product you hope never to use. The published industry data is the honest case for buying the upgrade that actually names your activity.
~6%
of US travelers actually purchase travel medical coverage — most go uninsured on the medical side.
UStiA4–10%
of trip cost is the typical band for comprehensive travel insurance; an activity upgrade is a loading on top.
UStiA, industry guidance50
US states regulate travel insurance as a licensed product, with model standards coordinated through the NAIC.
NAICActivity
exclusions are a leading reason adventure-travel claims are denied — the activity must be named in the schedule.
US State DepartmentStandards
for amusement rides and adventure attractions are published by ASTM International committee F24.
ASTM InternationalAbroad
US health plans rarely pay overseas, and Medicare does not — making travel medical the realistic source of cover for an injury on a jump abroad.
US State DepartmentFigures from industry associations and government sources (linked). General context, not a prediction for any individual trip.
Realistic injuries your policy should address
Eye and retinal injury
The blood-pressure spike during the rebound can cause retinal or eye injury. Rare, but a documented bungee-specific risk that needs medical cover.
Neck, back & cardiovascular stress
Whiplash-style neck and back strain and the cardiovascular load of the fall. Pre-existing waivers and primary medical matter here.
Harness, cord & dislocation injuries
Dislocations, rope burn, and the very rare cord or harness failure. Low probability, high cost — the textbook case for insurance.
Water-touch jumps
Jumps designed to dip into water add impact and drowning risk if depth or technique is misjudged. Confirm the variant you are doing is covered.
Medical evacuation and repatriation abroad
The famous jumps are rarely next door to a major trauma center. Nevis Bungy near Queenstown, the bridge over the gorge at Victoria Falls, Macau Tower, the Verzasca dam in Switzerland — a serious injury at any of them can mean local stabilization, an air ambulance, and repatriation home. That is where a generic policy’s evacuation limit, set for a city break, falls short.
We do not quote an adventure plan without a medical and medical-evacuation limit sized to the location, and we surface the carrier’s assistance partner — the people who actually coordinate the evacuation — on every comparison. A high limit is only useful if someone is running the logistics.
See also: CDC traveler health information and the US State Department’s your health abroad guidance.
The operator waiver is not your insurance
Every jump operator hands you a waiver at the platform. It is a liability release — it limits the operator’s legal exposure if something goes wrong. It is not medical cover, not evacuation cover, and not trip cover, and it does nothing for you if you are injured and facing a bill abroad.
The reverse worry is also wrong: signing the waiver does not void your travel insurance. What determines whether your claim is paid is your own policy wording — specifically, whether bungee jumping is named in the included schedule. Sign the operator’s waiver as required, and separately make sure the activity is inside your policy.
How much does bungee jumping travel insurance cost?
Comprehensive travel insurance runs roughly 4–10% of insured trip cost, and an adventure or extreme-sports upgrade is a loading on top — typically a single-digit-to-low-double-digit percentage. Travel medical plans (medical-only, no cancellation) are usually cheaper, and for a short trip built around a single jump they can be the right fit. The levers that move the premium most are age, trip cost, and trip length. Adding the activity itself is rarely the largest line item — but leaving it out is what gets a claim denied.
The thing to avoid is paying for a comprehensive policy that excludes the one activity you bought it for. A plan that is a few dollars cheaper and excludes bungee jumping is not cheaper for a jumper; it is uninsured for the moment that matters.
The instant quote gives you the real number, with the activity named in the plan.
Frequently asked questions
Is bungee jumping covered by standard travel insurance?
Do I need an adventure-sports upgrade to be covered?
Does signing the operator’s waiver affect my travel insurance?
What injuries are realistic with bungee jumping?
Are canyon swings, giant swings, and adventure-park combos covered too?
Does my policy cover medical treatment and evacuation abroad?
How much does adventure-sports cover for bungee jumping cost?
Are pre-existing medical conditions covered?
Related coverage
More in our expedition insurance guides and the destination library.
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We match your plan to the activities on your itinerary and show you what’s actually in the policy — bungee jumping, canyon swings, evacuation — not just the headline price.
Get a quoteThis page is general information about travel insurance for bungee jumping & canyon swings. It is not legal, medical, or financial advice. Coverage, limits, and eligibility are governed by the specific policy you buy and the carrier’s certificate of insurance. Always read your policy schedule before you travel.