Expedition Coverage
Scuba diving travel insurance — dive accident and chamber coverage
Every diver heading abroad faces a two-policy reality. Trip insurance handles cancellation, baggage, and general medical. A dive-accident plan handles decompression illness, the hyperbaric chamber, and the dive-specific medical chain. Standard policies cap dive depth, require certification, and may exclude chamber treatment entirely. Expedition Insure quotes plans written for real dive travel — remote-liveaboard evacuation, gear and camera cover, and a DAN-style coordination partner who can actually reach you.
Reviewed by Al Ste-Marie, Founder, Expedition Insure. Last updated June 2026.
The two policies every diver needs to understand
Most divers assume one policy does it all. It rarely does. There are two distinct kinds of cover, and a good dive trip is protected by both — or by a single plan that has been written to do both jobs at once.
The first is trip and travel insurance: cancellation and interruption for the money you have committed, baggage and delay cover for your gear and connections, general emergency medical, and medical evacuation. The second is dive-specific accident cover: decompression illness, hyperbaric chamber treatment, and dive-accident medical — the territory a dedicated plan from the Divers Alert Network (DAN) is built for. A standard travel policy often stops exactly where diving risk begins. Read the activity schedule on any plan you are considering, and treat a policy that is silent on chamber treatment as one that does not cover it.
See also our scuba and liveaboard insurance guide for the longer-form explainer behind these distinctions.
Depth caps, certification, and the diving you can’t insure by default
When a travel policy does cover scuba, it covers it on conditions. The fine print is where claims are won or lost, and it is consistent enough across the market that you can check it in five minutes before you buy.
- Depth cap. Recreational cover frequently stops at 30 metres (100 feet). Dive deeper than the stated limit and the claim can be excluded — even if the injury had nothing to do with depth.
- Certification requirement. You generally must hold a recognised certification — PADI, NAUI, SSI — and dive within its limits, often with a buddy or instructor. Diving outside your qualification is a common exclusion.
- Excluded disciplines. Solo diving, technical diving, cave and wreck penetration, and rebreather diving are typically excluded unless you hold the specific qualification and the policy explicitly names that activity.
- Chamber treatment. Decompression illness and hyperbaric recompression may be carved out of the medical cover entirely. If the schedule does not name them, assume they are out.
We surface this activity language on every quote so you can see the depth limit, certification clause, and chamber position before you commit — not after a claim is declined.
Standard policy vs dive-grade cover
Six line items separate a policy that pays a chamber-treatment and remote-evacuation claim from one that fights it. This is exactly what we check on every dive-travel quote.
| Coverage element | Typical standard policy | Dive-grade cover |
|---|---|---|
| Depth limit | Often capped at 30m (100ft), or scuba excluded | Recreational depths covered, with deeper/technical diving available where you hold the qualification |
| Decompression illness & hyperbaric chamber | Frequently excluded or silent | Decompression illness and chamber treatment named in the schedule |
| Remote-location evacuation | Low limit, no dive-accident coordination | Evacuation limit sized for boat-plus-air transfer, with DAN-style coordination |
| Emergency medical payment | Often excess (pays after your home plan) | Primary payment, no home-plan precondition |
| Dive gear, regulators & cameras | Low single-article limit; high-value items excluded | Higher limits with high-value equipment schedulable |
| Liveaboard trip interruption | Limited or excluded | Interruption cover sized for forced returns, weather, and DCI surface intervals |
General comparison of common market patterns, not a guarantee of any specific policy. Always read the certificate of insurance for your quoted plan.
Dive travel insurance by the numbers
Travel insurance is the rare product you hope never to use. The published guidance from dive-safety and travel-health authorities is the honest case for sizing dive cover — and evacuation limits — correctly.
18–24h
minimum surface interval dive-training agencies advise before flying, longer after multi-day diving.
CDC, scuba diving travel health30m
(100ft) — the depth limit beyond which many standard travel policies stop covering scuba.
PADI, recreational training standardsHours
to the nearest recompression chamber from a remote liveaboard, by boat and then air.
Divers Alert Network (DAN)3
major certifying agencies insurers recognise — PADI, NAUI, SSI — with cover tied to diving within your qualification.
PADI, certification overviewDCI
decompression illness and chamber treatment are dive-specific and may sit outside a standard medical policy.
DAN, dive medicine resourcesPre-trip
check your health abroad and required cover before departure, per US State Department guidance.
US State Department, your health abroadFigures reflect published guidance from dive-safety and travel-health authorities (linked). General information, not a prediction for any individual trip.
Dive-specific risks your policy should address
Decompression illness
DCI needs hyperbaric chamber treatment. Confirm the policy names decompression illness and chamber recompression — silence usually means excluded.
Remote-liveaboard evacuation
In Raja Ampat, Socorro, Cocos, or the remote Red Sea the nearest chamber is hours away by boat and air. The evacuation limit and a coordinator like DAN matter most here.
Fly-after-dive risk
Flying within 18–24h of your last dive raises DCS risk. Trip-delay and interruption cover should respond if a forced surface interval disrupts onward travel.
Gear, regulators, and cameras
Regulators, computers, and underwater camera rigs are expensive and often exceed baggage limits. Check single-article caps and whether high-value gear can be scheduled.
Decompression illness and the chamber: the non-negotiable
Every other benefit on a dive-travel policy is replaceable. The dive-specific medical chain is not. A decompression illness episode needs prompt recompression in a hyperbaric chamber, and from a remote dive site the route to one runs first by boat to land, then by air to a chamber-equipped hospital. That is a multi-leg evacuation, and the cost climbs with every leg.
Two things have to line up. First, a policy that explicitly covers decompression illness and chamber treatment — not a general medical limit that goes quiet on the words. Second, an evacuation limit large enough for boat-plus-air transfer, paired with a coordination service such as the Divers Alert Network (DAN) that can actually arrange the chamber and the flight. A limit with no one to run the logistics is not much use in open water.
See also: Divers Alert Network (DAN), CDC scuba diving travel health, and the US State Department guide to your health abroad.
Snorkeling vs scuba: not the same coverage question
Snorkeling and scuba are treated very differently by insurers, and conflating them is a common mistake. Snorkeling — staying at the surface, breathing through a tube — is usually included in standard travel cover as an ordinary holiday activity, with no certification requirement and no depth clause. It is the breath-hold and pressure exposure of scuba that triggers the dive-specific rules.
The moment you put a tank on your back, the depth cap, certification requirement, and decompression-illness questions all come into play. If your trip mixes both — a snorkeling tour one day, a certified dive the next — make sure the policy covers the scuba portion to the depth and discipline you actually intend to dive, not just the snorkeling. We flag the scuba activity language on every quote so the distinction is explicit.
How much does dive travel insurance cost?
Comprehensive trip protection runs a single-digit-to-low-double-digit percentage of insured trip cost. Travel medical plans (medical-only, no cancellation) are usually cheaper, but most dive travelers want full trip protection given the deposits a liveaboard week involves. The two levers that move the premium most are age and trip cost. The diving itself adds less than people expect once the policy is sized to include dive-accident cover and adequate evacuation.
What to weigh, not quotes:
- Pairing a travel policy with a dedicated dive-accident plan (DAN-style) is usually a modest addition relative to the cost of the trip.
- Scheduling high-value gear — regulators, dive computers, camera rigs — may add a small amount but protects the equipment that makes the trip possible.
- Remote liveaboard itineraries justify a higher evacuation limit, which is one of the smaller line items relative to the protection it buys.
The instant quote gives you the real number.
Frequently asked questions
Does travel insurance cover scuba diving, and to what depth?
Do I need DAN as well as travel insurance?
Is decompression illness and hyperbaric chamber treatment covered?
What certification and "within training limits" requirements apply?
How does evacuation work from a remote liveaboard?
Why can’t I fly straight after diving?
Is my dive gear, including cameras and regulators, covered?
How much does dive travel insurance cost?
Are pre-existing medical conditions covered?
Related coverage
More in our expedition insurance guides, the destination library, and our scuba and liveaboard insurance hub.
Ready for a real dive-travel quote?
We match your plan to your dive itinerary, certification, and evacuation needs — and show you what’s actually in the policy: depth limits, chamber treatment, gear, and CFAR — not just the headline price.
Get a quoteThis page is general information about travel insurance for scuba diving & dive travel. 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.