Coverage
Cruise insurance — match your cover to the ship and the waters
Cruise insurance isn't one product. A big-ship ocean cruise in serviced waters and an Antarctic expedition on a 100-passenger vessel are the same category of cover sized completely differently. The activities off the ship, the remoteness of the route, and the operator's own insurance rules decide what you actually need. Find your type of cruise below — the deeper your expedition, the more the policy has to do.
Reviewed by Al Ste-Marie, Founder, Expedition Insure. Last updated June 2026.
Match your cover to your type of cruise
The single most useful thing you can do before buying cruise insurance is decide which kind of cruise you're on. Each one routes to the cover written for it.
Expedition & small-ship cruise
Zodiac landings, kayaking, shore hikes, remote waters. Activities most consumer policies exclude, and multi-day evacuation chains. This is its own category of cover.
Polar cruise (Antarctica & Arctic)
IAATO / AECO operators publish six-figure medevac minimums. Polar regions and the polar plunge are excluded on most standard cruise policies.
Galápagos cruise
Small-ship cruising in a national park, with snorkelling, panga rides, and a long evacuation back through Quito or Guayaquil. Operator insurance requirements apply.
Mainstream / big-ship ocean cruise
Predictable itineraries on large ships in serviced waters. Standard comprehensive travel insurance usually fits — just confirm medical, evacuation, and missed-port cover before you rely on it.
What cruise insurance must cover
Whatever the ship, a few benefits are non-negotiable for any cruise. Beyond these, the ship and route decide how high the limits have to go.
- Emergency medical with primary payment — so a claim pays without waiting on your home health plan.
- Medical evacuation sized to the most remote point on the itinerary, including ship-to-shore evacuation and onward repatriation.
- Trip cancellation and interruption for the full non-refundable trip cost — cruise penalty schedules are steep and final payment lands months out.
- Missed port of departure and missed connections — a delayed flight that misses embarkation is a classic cruise claim.
- Activity cover for everything on the daily plan — for an expedition cruise that means Zodiac landings, kayaking, and shore hikes, not just deck-chair days.
Read the activity schedule and the evacuation limit, not the brochure. That's where a cruise policy either holds up or falls apart.
Why the ship and the route change the policy you need
Remoteness drives medevac
A coastal ocean cruise sits near developed ports; an expedition runs days from the nearest hospital. The evacuation chain — not the cabin price — sets the limit you need.
Activities drive exclusions
Zodiac landings, kayaking, snorkelling, and shore hikes get classified as adventure activities and excluded on many standard cruise policies. Expedition-grade cover writes them in.
Operator rules set minimums
Polar and many small-ship operators publish their own insurance minimums and won't embark a guest without proof. We pull the operator's requirement into your quote so you can match it.
Forced itinerary change
Ice, weather, and port closures reshape expedition itineraries mid-voyage. Mainstream policies often don't cover the resulting cost; expedition-grade policies do.
If your cruise is an expedition, polar, or Galápagos voyage, the dedicated pages above size all of this for the specific itinerary. If it's a mainstream ocean cruise, standard comprehensive cover usually fits — just confirm the limits.
Standard cruise policy vs expedition-grade cover
Six line items separate a policy that pays a ship-to-shore evacuation claim from one that fights it. They only matter once your cruise leaves serviced waters — which is exactly when they matter most.
| Coverage element | Typical standard cruise policy | Expedition-grade cover |
|---|---|---|
| Medical evacuation limit | $50k–$100k, often capped | $500k–$1M+, sized to remote ship-to-shore evacuation and repatriation |
| Off-ship activities (Zodiac, kayak, shore hikes, snorkelling) | Frequently excluded as “adventure activities” | Inside the activity schedule by default |
| Polar / remote-region cover | Polar regions and remote archipelagos often excluded | Written for Antarctic, Arctic, and remote itineraries |
| Emergency medical payment | Often excess (pays after your home plan) | Primary payment, no home-plan precondition |
| Cancel For Any Reason (CFAR) | Sometimes offered | Available, priced side-by-side at quote |
| Itinerary disruption from ice/weather | Limited or excluded | Trip delay/interruption sized for ice, weather, and diversion realities |
General comparison of common market patterns, not a guarantee of any specific policy. Always read the certificate of insurance for your quoted plan.
Cancel For Any Reason (CFAR) on a cruise
Cruise penalty schedules are unforgiving and final payment lands typically 90–120 days before departure. CFAR — added at first purchase (typically within 14–21 days of initial deposit) — reimburses 50–75% of non-refundable trip cost for cancellations the base policy will not cover. On a large, non-refundable expedition deposit it often pays for itself in optionality alone.
Pricing is normally a single-digit-to-low-double-digit percentage on top of the base premium. We price both paths on every quote so the trade-off is visible.
How much does cruise insurance cost?
Comprehensive cruise cover runs 4–10% of insured trip cost. Mainstream ocean cruises land in the lower half; expedition and polar cruises land higher because of medevac sizing and activity cover. Age and trip cost are the dominant levers.
- Two travelers under 60, $6,000 Caribbean ocean cruise: low three figures combined for full trip protection.
- Two travelers under 60, $18,000 Antarctic Peninsula voyage: mid three to low four figures combined.
- Two travelers under 60, $11,000 Galápagos small-ship cruise: low to mid three figures combined.
- CFAR upgrade: 40–60% on top of the base premium, reimburses 50–75% of non-refundable trip cost.
Frequently asked questions
Is cruise insurance different from regular travel insurance?
Do I need special insurance for an expedition or polar cruise?
How much medical evacuation cover does a cruise need?
Will my credit card cover a cruise?
When should I buy cruise insurance?
How much does cruise insurance cost?
Cruise cover by voyage type
More in our expedition insurance guides and the destination library.
Ready for a real cruise quote?
Tell us the ship and the route and we'll match the quote to your cruise — and to any operator insurance minimums — with activity cover surfaced for every landing and excursion.
Get a quoteThis page is general information about travel insurance for cruising. 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.