Expedition Coverage
Ecuador travel insurance — Andes altitude, Amazon, and climbing cover
Mainland Ecuador packs three worlds into a small country: the high Andes around Quito and the Avenue of the Volcanoes, the Amazon rainforest of Yasuní and Cuyabeno, and the cloud forest at Mindo. Each carries a different risk — altitude illness on arrival and on a Cotopaxi or Chimborazo climb, remote-area medical needs in the jungle, and the long road and river transits in between. Expedition Insure quotes plans built for that range, not a generic sightseeing policy.
Reviewed by Al Ste-Marie, Founder, Expedition Insure. Last updated June 2026.
What Ecuador travel insurance must cover
A mainland Ecuador trip is rarely one activity. A typical two-week itinerary touches Quito at altitude, a volcano day-hike or summit attempt, a jungle lodge reached by river, and a cloud-forest stop at Mindo — with long mountain road transfers connecting them. A policy written for a beach holiday quietly fails across most of that.
At a minimum, look for: emergency medical expense that pays as primary cover; a medical evacuation limit large enough to fund a remote-area extraction from the Andes or Amazon to a hospital in Quito or Guayaquil; trip cancellation and interruption for your full insured trip cost; and explicit coverage for the activities on your itinerary — altitude trekking, and, if you are climbing, technical mountaineering on glaciated peaks. The activity schedule and the altitude ceiling are where consumer policies fail Ecuador travelers, so read the schedule, not the marketing page.
Altitude illness: from Quito to the volcanoes
Altitude is the first risk most Ecuador travelers underestimate. Quito sits at about 2,850 m (9,350 ft), high enough that acute mountain sickness (AMS) can begin on arrival — headache, nausea, fatigue, and broken sleep are common in the first day or two. Quilotoa, the crater-lake hike on the Quilotoa Loop, sits near 3,900 m. The classic “Avenue of the Volcanoes” drive keeps you high for days.
On a climb, the stakes change. As you go higher toward a Cotopaxi or Chimborazo summit, mild AMS can progress to high-altitude pulmonary or cerebral edema — true emergencies that require immediate descent and hospital care. The CDC publishes detailed guidance on recognizing and managing altitude illness. For insurance, two things matter: the plan must cover altitude illness as an emergency, and the medical evacuation limit must fund getting you down and into a hospital in Quito or Guayaquil quickly.
See: CDC guidance on altitude illness and the CDC traveler health page for Ecuador.
Why a standard travel insurance policy falls short for Ecuador
Consumer travel insurance — the kind bundled with airfare or a credit card — is priced for the median trip. Three things break for an Ecuador traveler who goes beyond Quito’s old town.
- Altitude ceilings. Many policies stop covering above a stated altitude. A Cotopaxi (5,897 m) or Chimborazo (6,263 m) ascent can sit entirely above that ceiling, voiding cover exactly where you most need it.
- Activity exclusions. Glacier travel, roped climbing, and even some high-altitude trekking get classified as “mountaineering” or “hazardous activities” and excluded by default. The exclusion is in the schedule, not the brochure.
- Evacuation limits. A $50,000 or $100,000 medevac limit may not fund a remote extraction from an Amazon lodge or a high volcano to a hospital in Quito or Guayaquil. Remote-area evacuation is expensive.
The cheapest travel insurance for Ecuador is the policy that pays the claim. A plan that costs a little less and excludes glacier climbing or remote evacuation is not cheaper on a Cotopaxi summit day; it is uninsured.
Standard policy vs expedition-grade Ecuador cover
Six line items separate a policy that pays an Andes or Amazon evacuation claim from one that fights it. This is exactly what we check on every Ecuador quote.
| Coverage element | Typical standard policy | Expedition-grade (Ecuador) |
|---|---|---|
| Medical evacuation limit | $50k–$100k, often capped | Sized for remote-area extraction from the Andes or Amazon to Quito or Guayaquil |
| Altitude ceiling (Cotopaxi 5,897 m / Chimborazo 6,263 m) | Often capped at 4,000–6,000 m | Raised to match your summit; altitude illness covered as an emergency |
| High-altitude mountaineering & glacier travel | Frequently excluded as “mountaineering” or “hazardous” | Inside the activity schedule when the climb is declared |
| Amazon remote-area medical (Yasuní, Cuyabeno) | In-city ambulance only; remote extraction unclear | River-to-air evacuation contemplated; tropical illness covered |
| Emergency medical payment | Often excess (pays after your home plan) | Primary payment, no home-plan precondition |
| Trip interruption from illness or road/weather disruption | Limited or excluded | Interruption and missed-connection sized for mountain-route realities |
General comparison of common market patterns, not a guarantee of any specific policy. Always read the certificate of insurance for your quoted plan.
Ecuador travel insurance by the numbers
Travel insurance is the rare product you hope never to use. Industry filings and public health guidance are the honest case for sizing Ecuador cover — and evacuation limits — correctly.
5–8%
of trip cost is the typical comprehensive travel-insurance premium.
US Travel Insurance Association (UStiA)~6%
of US travelers buy travel medical coverage — most go uninsured on the medical side.
US Travel Insurance Association (UStiA)2,850 m
elevation of Quito — high enough for acute mountain sickness to start on arrival.
CDC, altitude illness6,263 m
summit of Chimborazo — above the altitude ceiling of most consumer policies.
CDC, Ecuador traveler healthYellow fever
vaccination is recommended for travel to the Amazon lowlands of Ecuador.
CDC, Ecuador traveler healthCheck advisory
US State Department advisory levels for Ecuador vary by province — review before booking.
US State Department, EcuadorFigures from industry filings and US government public-health and travel guidance (linked). General references, not a prediction for any individual trip.
Ecuador-specific risks your policy should address
Altitude illness in the Andes
AMS from Quito (2,850 m) to Quilotoa and beyond. Severe cases on a volcano need immediate descent and a hospital. Cover must treat it as an emergency.
High-altitude climbing (Cotopaxi, Chimborazo)
Glaciated, technical peaks. Needs mountaineering-grade cover with the altitude ceiling raised and the climb inside the activity schedule.
Amazon remoteness (Yasuní, Cuyabeno)
Jungle lodges reached by river, hours from care. A serious illness or injury may need river-then-air evacuation to Quito or Guayaquil.
Tropical and GI illness
Yellow fever and malaria precautions in the Amazon lowlands; food- and water-borne stomach illness anywhere. Primary medical and trip interruption matter.
Mountain road and bus transit
Long, winding transfers connect the Andes, Amazon, and Mindo cloud forest. Accident, delay, and missed-connection cover should be on the policy.
Galápagos add-on legs
If your trip extends to the islands, the cruise and dive profile needs its own activity and evacuation cover — see the dedicated Galápagos page.
Medical evacuation: the non-negotiable
Most benefits on an Ecuador policy are replaceable. Medical evacuation is not. From a high volcano, a serious altitude case needs rapid descent and transfer to a hospital in Quito or Guayaquil. From an Amazon lodge in Yasuní or Cuyabeno, the chain runs by river to a road or airstrip, then by air to a city. Either way the cost of a remote-area extraction can reach well into the thousands — and the limit on a cheap consumer plan may not cover it.
We do not quote any Ecuador plan without an evacuation limit sized for that scenario, and we surface the carrier’s evacuation-services partner — the people who actually run the logistics — on every comparison. A high limit is useless if there is no one to coordinate the flight.
See also: CDC traveler health information for Ecuador and the US State Department Ecuador page.
The Amazon: Yasuní, Cuyabeno, and remote-area cover
The Ecuadorian Amazon is one of the most biodiverse places on earth and one of the harder places to evacuate from. Jungle lodges in Yasuní National Park and the Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve are reached by a combination of road, river, and motorized canoe — often several hours of travel from the nearest clinic, and longer from a hospital with surgical capability.
The CDC recommends yellow fever vaccination and malaria precautions for the Amazon lowlands, and the practical health risks include tropical fevers, snakebite, insect-borne disease, and food- and water-borne illness. For insurance, the priorities are clear: emergency medical that pays as primary cover, and a medical evacuation limit large enough to fund a multi-leg extraction to Quito or Guayaquil. Confirm both before you book a remote lodge.
Cloud forest, the wider trip, and the Galápagos question
Between the high Andes and the Amazon, many itineraries add the cloud forest at Mindo — lower-altitude, lush, and centered on birding, waterfalls, and canopy activities like zip-lines and tarabita cable cars. The risks are milder than a volcano or a jungle lodge, but the same principles apply: make sure the activities you book sit inside the policy’s schedule, and that trip interruption covers the long transfers in and out.
A common question is whether the Galápagos Islands are covered by a mainland Ecuador policy. The islands are Ecuadorian, but the trip profile — live-aboard cruising, snorkeling and diving, remote-island evacuation — is different enough that we keep a separate guide for it. If your trip combines the mainland with the islands, quote for the whole journey and tell us both legs so the activity schedule and evacuation limits cover each.
Islands on your itinerary? Start with our Galapagos travel insurance page.
How much does Ecuador travel insurance cost?
Comprehensive trip protection runs roughly a single-digit to low-double-digit percentage of insured trip cost. Travel medical plans (medical-only, no cancellation) are usually cheaper, but most travelers with large non-refundable deposits want full trip protection. The levers that move the premium most are age and trip cost — and, for Ecuador specifically, whether you need mountaineering-grade cover for a Cotopaxi or Chimborazo climb or a raised evacuation limit for the Amazon.
Things that move the number on an Ecuador trip:
- Sightseeing-only Andes and cloud-forest trip: a standard comprehensive plan with adequate medevac is usually enough.
- Cotopaxi or Chimborazo summit attempt: add mountaineering-grade cover with the altitude ceiling raised — this is a meaningful upgrade over a base plan.
- Remote Amazon lodge: raise the medical evacuation limit to fund a multi-leg extraction; the line item is the evacuation, not the destination.
The instant quote gives you the real number for your itinerary.
Frequently asked questions
Does Ecuador travel insurance cover altitude sickness in Quito or on Cotopaxi?
Is high-altitude climbing on Cotopaxi or Chimborazo covered?
How does insurance handle the Amazon — Yasuní and Cuyabeno jungle lodges?
Is Galápagos covered by an Ecuador policy too?
Does it cover stomach illness from food or water?
Ecuador has a travel advisory — does that affect my coverage?
How much does Ecuador travel insurance cost?
Are pre-existing medical conditions covered?
Related coverage
More in our expedition insurance guides and the destination library.
Ready for a real Ecuador quote?
We match your plan to your itinerary — Quito altitude, a Cotopaxi or Chimborazo climb, an Amazon lodge, the Mindo cloud forest — and show you what’s actually in the policy: activities, altitude ceiling, and evacuation, not just the headline price.
Get a quoteThis page is general information about travel insurance for Ecuador (mainland). 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.