Couverture d'expédition
Assurance voyage safari — couverture de niveau évacuation pour les safaris africains
Évacuation aérienne de la brousse à la ville, couverture des activités de safari à pied et à cheval, protection des permis de trekking de gorilles et services d'évacuation recommandés par l'opérateur. Une assurance voyage standard n'est pas conçue pour un camp dans le Maasai Mara situé à trois heures de Nairobi. Expedition Insure propose des formules adaptées aux réalités des safaris africains — d'une lune de miel dans un seul camp au Kenya à une traversée du Botswana au South Luangwa.
Reviewed by Al Ste-Marie, Founder, Expedition Insure. Last updated juillet 2026.
Ce que doit couvrir votre assurance voyage safari
Un safari, c'est deux voyages en un : d'un côté, des vols internationaux long-courriers avec des acomptes pour les lodges déjà versés, et de l'autre, un itinéraire en campement reculé avec accès par piste de brousse. La couverture doit prendre en compte ces deux aspects, et pas seulement le trajet d'aéroport à aéroport.
Au minimum, recherchez : une couverture médicale d'urgence avec paiement de premier rang (et non excédentaire), un plafond d'évacuation médicale couvrant un vol réaliste de la brousse vers la ville ainsi que le rapatriement ultérieur, l'annulation et l'interruption de voyage pour la totalité du coût du voyage assuré, le retard de bagages lors d'un long transit international, et une couverture explicite pour les activités de safari prévues à votre itinéraire — safari à pied, à cheval, trekking de gorilles, VTT, montgolfière, safaris nocturnes. De nombreuses polices grand public excluent discrètement ces activités en les classant comme activités d'aventure, et ne révèlent cette lacune qu'au moment du dépôt d'une réclamation. Portez également une attention particulière aux conditions relatives aux bagages : les avions légers qui relient les camps de brousse imposent des limites de poids strictes — souvent autour de 15 kg (33 lb) dans un sac souple — et les plafonds par article des polices standard couvrent rarement les boîtiers d'appareil photo, les objectifs et le matériel optique que la plupart des voyageurs en safari transportent.
Services d'évacuation recommandés par l'opérateur
La plupart des opérateurs de safari reconnus recommandent — et un nombre croissant l'exigent — que les clients disposent à la fois d'une assurance voyage et d'une adhésion à un service d'évacuation aérienne régionale.AMREF Flying Doctors est le fournisseur le plus courant en Afrique de l’Est ; des services comparables existent en Afrique australe. Ces adhésions prennent en charge le vol depuis une piste de brousse vers Nairobi ou de la brousse vers Johannesburg au moment où il est nécessaire ; l’assurance voyage couvre la facture d’hôpital, le rapatriement à domicile et tout ce que l’adhésion ne couvre pas.
Une simple carte de membre ne constitue pas une assurance. Nous ne proposons pas de forfait safari comme s'il s'agissait d'une assurance — la limite d'évacuation médicale du contrat est calculée en partant du principe que le service régional prend en charge la première étape et que la police couvre le reste.
Pourquoi une assurance voyage classique ne suffit pas pour un safari
L’assurance voyage grand public est tarifée pour le voyage médian. Trois éléments posent problème pour un voyageur en safari.
- Exclusions d'activités. Les safaris à pied, les safaris à cheval, le trekking des gorilles, les safaris nocturnes et les transferts aériens entre les camps sont classés comme activités d'aventure et sont exclus par défaut dans de nombreuses polices.
- Plafonds d'évacuation. Une limite d'évacuation médicale de 50 000 $ ou 100 000 $ couvre un vol de brousse vers Nairobi ou Johannesburg, mais est largement insuffisante pour un rapatriement complet vers l'Amérique du Nord ou l'Europe.
- Exclusions géographiques. A handful of carriers exclude or sub-limit specific countries based on State Department advisories — Sudan, parts of the Sahel, certain border zones. Always confirm your specific itinerary is in scope.
The cheapest safari travel insurance is the one that pays the claim. Saving $40 on a policy that excludes walking safaris is not a saving.
Standard policy vs expedition-grade safari cover
Six line items separate a policy that pays a bush-evacuation claim from one that fights it. This is exactly what we check on every safari quote.
| Coverage element | Typical standard policy | Expedition-grade (safari) |
|---|---|---|
| Medical evacuation limit | $50k–$100k, often capped | $250k–$1M+, sized to the bush-to-city flight plus onward repatriation |
| Walking, horseback & gorilla-trekking safari | Frequently excluded as “adventure activities” | Inside the activity schedule by default |
| Bush-strip air ambulance | Not contemplated | Coordinated with AMREF / regional service; the policy pays the bill |
| Emergency medical payment | Often excess (pays after your home plan) | Primary payment, no home-plan precondition |
| Cancel For Any Reason (CFAR) | Rarely offered | Available, priced side-by-side at quote |
| Geographic exclusions | Some Sub-Saharan zones sub-limited or excluded | Itinerary confirmed in-scope before purchase |
General comparison of common market patterns, not a guarantee of any specific policy. Always read the certificate of insurance for your quoted plan.
Safari travel insurance by the numbers
Travel insurance is the rare product you hope never to use. The published figures are the honest case for sizing safari cover — and evacuation limits — correctly.
$20K–$200K
typical cost of a medical evacuation by air ambulance back to the United States, depending on location and condition.
U.S. State Department$100,000+
what an evacuation from a remote area to a high-quality hospital can otherwise cost without coverage.
CDC Travelers' Health$0
what U.S. Medicare pays for medical care outside the United States — most plans cover nothing abroad.
Medicare.gov$5.56B
spent by Americans on travel protection in 2024 — up 46% from 2019 as more travelers insure trips.
NAIC, citing UStiA94.7%
of travel-protection products bought are trip cancellation, interruption, or delay cover.
NAIC, citing UStiAFigures from U.S. government agencies and industry associations (linked). Historical aggregates, not a prediction for any individual trip.
Safari-specific risks your policy should address
Vehicle and animal incidents
Game-drive rollovers, animal-related injury on walking safari, falls from horseback. Must be inside the activity schedule, not excluded as adventure.
Tropical illness
Malaria, dengue, tick-borne fevers. Treatment is covered by medical expense; vaccination and prophylaxis are your responsibility.
Bush-strip evacuation
Camps are hours by light aircraft from the nearest trauma center. AMREF, MARS, or carrier-arranged air ambulance handles the leg; the policy handles the bill.
Supplier default and itinerary change
Multi-lodge itineraries with strict penalty schedules. Financial-default and forced-itinerary-change benefits matter more here than on a typical cruise.
Medical evacuation: the non-negotiable
Safari medical evacuation is rarely a single helicopter ride. The chain typically runs: camp-to-bush-strip transfer, light aircraft to a regional hub (Nairobi, Joburg, Cape Town, Windhoek, Kigali), stabilization, then a fixed-wing intercontinental flight home. Costs stack across each leg.
Sizing a medevac limit correctly means looking at the camp on your itinerary that is furthest from a hospital, not the average. A Lower Zambezi camp, a Northern Serengeti mobile camp, or a remote Bisate are an order of magnitude further from trauma care than a city-edge lodge.
See also: CDC traveler health by country, the US State Department Kenya page, and Tanzania country information.
Cancel For Any Reason (CFAR) for safari
A multi-lodge safari is a chain of non-refundable deposits with aggressive penalty schedules. Final payment is typically due 60–90 days out, and most lodges retain 100% of a deposit within 30 days of arrival. CFAR is worth pricing on every safari quote.
It is an upgrade, added at first purchase (typically within 14–21 days of initial deposit), and reimburses 50–75% of non-refundable trip cost for cancellations the base policy will not cover. A change of work plans, a family illness that does not meet the base policy's medical-cancellation threshold, a country-specific advisory that bumps you to the next year — CFAR is the bridge.
Yellow fever, malaria, and other entry-side requirements
Some safari countries require proof of yellow fever vaccination on entry, especially when arriving from a country with active transmission. Coverage for the vaccination itself is your responsibility (travel clinic, not insurance), but the CDC yellow-fever and malaria country guide is the source we recommend confirming against.
Insurance pays for treatment after the fact — for malaria, vehicle accidents, tropical fevers, or anything else covered by the policy. It is not a substitute for vaccination or prophylaxis. The IAMAT country profiles are a useful second source for pre-trip planning.
How much does safari travel insurance cost?
Comprehensive trip protection runs roughly 4–10% of insured trip cost. Travel medical plans (medical-only, no cancellation) are cheaper, but most safari travelers want full trip protection given the multi-lodge deposit structure. Age and trip cost are the dominant levers; the destination itself adds little once medevac is sized correctly.
Examples to anchor expectations — these are not quotes:
- Two travelers under 60, $12,000 insured trip cost: low-to-mid three figures per traveler for full trip protection.
- Two travelers, one 70+, $18,000 insured trip cost: mid three to low four figures combined; age scales the bill.
- CFAR upgrade: 40–60% on top of the base premium, reimburses 50–75% of non-refundable trip cost.
The instant quote gives you the real number.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need travel insurance for an African safari?
How much medical evacuation coverage do I need for safari?
Does AMREF Flying Doctors membership replace travel insurance?
Are walking, horseback, and gorilla-trekking safaris covered?
How much does safari travel insurance cost?
What about malaria, yellow fever, and pre-existing conditions?
Are Cancel For Any Reason (CFAR) upgrades worth it for safari?
When should I buy?
Related coverage
Kenya safari travel insurance
Tanzania safari travel insurance
Kilimanjaro climbing insurance
Medical evacuation insurance
More in our expedition insurance guides and the destination library.
Ready for a real safari quote?
We size the medevac limit to the camp on your itinerary that is furthest from a hospital, and we surface activity language so you know whether walking, horseback, and gorilla trekking are in or out before you buy.
Obtenir un devisThis page is general information about travel insurance for African safari. 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.