Not all travel insurance policies are built the same. We’ve done the heavy lifting — comparing medical limits, COVID cover, cancellation benefits, and premiums across Singapore’s top insurers so you don’t have to.
⚡ Key Takeaways
- The best travel insurance for most Singaporeans balances a high overseas medical limit (at least S$250,000), emergency evacuation cover, and trip cancellation protection — not just the lowest premium.
- AIG TravelGuard, Income Travel Insurance, FWD Travel Insurance, and Etiqa TripCare 360° are among the strongest all-round plans available to Singapore residents.
- COVID-19 cover is now standard across major insurers, but policy terms — especially for cancellation triggered by a positive test — vary widely.
- Adventure sports, pre-existing conditions, and travel to MFA-flagged destinations are the three most common claim-rejection triggers — always read the exclusions.
- Annual multi-trip plans offer better value if you travel three or more times a year; single-trip plans suit occasional travellers.
- Schengen visa applicants must show proof of insurance with at least €30,000 medical cover — all major Singapore plans meet this threshold.
What Is Travel Insurance and Why Do You Need It?
Travel insurance is a short-term insurance product that protects you from a range of financial losses that can arise during a trip — before departure, during the journey, and sometimes even after you return. In Singapore, travel insurance is sold by licensed general insurers regulated by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS).
At its core, a travel insurance policy provides cover for emergency medical expenses overseas, trip cancellation or disruption, lost or delayed baggage, and personal liability. Premium plans layer on additional benefits like COVID-19 coverage, adventure sports, rental vehicle excess, and even pet care while you’re away.
Why MediShield Life Isn’t Enough Overseas
Many Singaporeans assume their Integrated Shield Plan provides coverage when they travel. It doesn’t — not in any meaningful way. MediShield Life and IP riders are designed for Singapore hospitals. While some IPs extend limited emergency coverage overseas, the benefit limits are low relative to actual treatment costs in countries like the US, UK, or Australia. A single night in a US hospital can cost US$10,000 or more. Without dedicated travel insurance, you bear that risk yourself.
Similarly, if you’ve invested in critical illness insurance or whole life coverage, those products do not substitute for travel insurance’s trip cancellation or emergency evacuation benefits. Each product plays a different role in your financial planning.
How to Compare Travel Insurance Plans in Singapore
Walking into the market to compare travel insurance can feel overwhelming. There are more than a dozen insurers, each with multiple plan tiers and optional riders. Here’s the framework we use at SingaporeFinance.sg to cut through the noise.
1. Overseas Medical Expense Limit
This is the single most important number. Medical emergencies abroad — a fractured leg in Bali, a cardiac event in Tokyo, or a serious infection in India — can generate five- or six-figure bills in SGD. We recommend a minimum of S$250,000 for ASEAN travel and S$500,000+ for trips to the US, Europe, or Australia. Many premium plans offer S$1 million or unlimited cover.
2. Emergency Medical Evacuation
If you’re hospitalised in a country with inadequate medical infrastructure, evacuation to a better-equipped hospital (or back to Singapore) can cost S$50,000–S$200,000 for an air ambulance. Look for plans offering unlimited evacuation cover — this is a must, not a nice-to-have.
3. Trip Cancellation and Loss of Deposit
This pays out if you have to cancel or cut short your trip due to a covered reason — illness, death of a family member, natural disaster, or similar. Check the covered reasons list carefully; not all insurers cover the same scenarios. Limits typically range from S$3,000 to S$15,000.
4. Baggage and Personal Belongings
Overseas baggage limits usually range from S$3,000 to S$8,000, but per-item limits (often S$500–S$1,000 for electronics) matter more for high-value items like cameras and laptops. If you’re carrying expensive equipment, consider a specialist gadget insurance add-on.
5. Travel Delay Benefits
Most plans offer a cash benefit for delays beyond 6 hours — typically S$100–S$200 per 6-hour block, up to a maximum. This won’t cover all your costs but helps with meals and accommodation. Check the trigger: some require a minimum delay at the departure airport; others cover connecting flight delays too.
6. Personal Liability
Covers legal liability if you accidentally injure someone or damage their property while travelling. Limits of S$500,000 to S$1 million are standard. This is especially relevant in litigious markets like the US.
Top Travel Insurance Plans in Singapore 2026 — Ranked
We evaluated plans from Singapore’s major travel insurers across seven criteria: medical limits, evacuation cover, cancellation benefits, COVID-19 coverage, claims experience, pricing, and policy flexibility. Here are our top picks.
Strengths
- Among the highest overseas medical limits in the market
- Unlimited emergency evacuation
- Strong global assistance network & 24/7 helpline
- Adventure sports rider available
- Well-regarded claims experience
Limitations
- Premium-priced vs. budget competitors
- COVID cover only on higher tiers
- Pre-existing conditions not covered without declaration
Strengths
- Pre-existing condition extension — standout feature
- Excellent family plan value
- High baggage limit (S$8,000 Preferred)
- Strong brand trust and local claims team
- Annual plan available up to age 85
Limitations
- Pre-existing extension must be declared and approved
- Adventure sports rider limited vs. AIG
- Online portal experience lags digital-native rivals
Strengths
- Strong medical & evacuation limits at competitive price
- Best-in-class mobile claims experience
- Easy online purchase and management
- Frequent promotional discounts
Limitations
- Newer brand — less established claims track record vs. AIG/Income
- No pre-existing condition extension
- Annual plan age cap lower than some rivals
Strengths
- Competitive pricing with large promo discounts
- Home contents cover while travelling — unique feature
- Strong Maybank / Etiqa financial backing
- Good COVID-19 coverage terms
Limitations
- Trip cancellation limit (S$10,000 Supreme) lower than top rivals
- Claims process less streamlined than FWD
- Adventure sports cover more limited
Strengths
- Broad covered cancellation reasons
- Regional hospital direct billing network
- Strong brand and financial strength
- Loyalty benefits for existing AXA customers
Limitations
- Baggage limit (S$6,000) below top rivals
- Digital claims UX less modern than FWD
- COVID cover starts at Deluxe — not Essential
Side-by-Side Comparison Table: Top Travel Insurance Plans in Singapore
All figures reflect the highest available tier from each insurer as of mid-2026. Always verify current limits on the insurer’s product disclosure sheet before purchase.
| Insurer / Plan | Medical Limit | Evacuation | Trip Cancellation | Baggage | COVID-19 | Pre-Ex Cover | Annual Plan | Adventure Sports |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AIG TravelGuard Platinum | S$1,500,000 | Unlimited | S$15,000 | S$7,500 | Yes | Rider only | Yes | Rider |
| Income Preferred | S$1,000,000 | Unlimited | S$15,000 | S$8,000 | Yes | Extension | Yes | Limited |
| FWD First | S$1,000,000 | Unlimited | S$15,000 | S$7,500 | Yes | No | Yes | Limited |
| Etiqa TripCare 360° Supreme | S$1,000,000 | Unlimited | S$10,000 | S$7,500 | Yes | No | Yes | No |
| AXA SmartTraveller Prestige | S$1,000,000 | Unlimited | S$15,000 | S$6,000 | Deluxe+ | No | Yes | Rider |
| Singlife Travel Prestige | S$1,000,000 | Unlimited | S$15,000 | S$8,000 | Yes | No | Yes | Limited |
Source: Insurer product disclosure sheets and policy wording documents as at June 2025. “Rider” means available as paid add-on. “Extension” means available subject to declaration and insurer approval. Always verify current terms directly with the insurer.
Single-Trip vs. Annual Multi-Trip vs. Group Plans
Single-Trip Travel Insurance
Best for travellers who take one or two international trips per year. Coverage begins at departure from Singapore and ends when you return. You pay once per journey, and the premium reflects the trip’s destination zone and duration. If you’re planning a one-off holiday to Europe or a business trip to the US, a single-trip plan is the natural choice.
Annual Multi-Trip Travel Insurance
If you travel three or more times a year, an annual plan almost always delivers better value. One premium covers unlimited trips within 12 months, subject to a maximum per-trip duration (commonly 30, 60, or 90 days). Annual plans remove the hassle of buying insurance before every departure — useful for busy professionals and frequent leisure travellers. The break-even point versus buying three separate single-trip policies is usually around S$150–S$200 in annual premium depending on your typical destination.
Group and Family Travel Insurance
For families travelling together, a family plan bundles two adults and dependent children at a meaningfully lower combined premium. Check whether coverage limits are per person or shared — per-person limits are more generous and are now standard among top insurers. For groups of six or more, dedicated group travel insurance is available with additional discounts. If you’re organising a company retreat or school trip, group plans from AIG, Income, and others can accommodate large parties.
COVID-19 Cover — What You Actually Get in 2026
Since the pandemic, most Singapore travel insurers have integrated COVID-19 coverage into their standard plans — but the devil is in the detail. Coverage generally falls into three categories: overseas hospitalisation due to COVID-19 diagnosis, trip cancellation if you test positive before departure, and overseas quarantine allowances.
Key caveats to watch for: Coverage is typically void if you travel against an MFA “Do Not Travel” advisory for your destination. Some insurers impose a 14-day waiting period from policy purchase before COVID-related cancellation claims are eligible. Positive test requirements — some insurers require a PCR result; others accept ART — differ. And quarantine daily allowances (typically S$100–S$200 per day) have strict caps.
For travellers who acquired term life insurance or whole life cover with a pandemic exclusion period, it’s worth cross-checking with your financial adviser whether your policies still carry any COVID-related restrictions.
Key Exclusions to Watch Out For
Understanding what isn’t covered is at least as important as knowing what is. These are the most common exclusion-related claim rejections in Singapore travel insurance.
Pre-Existing Medical Conditions
If you have a chronic illness — diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, asthma — and you suffer a related emergency abroad, a standard policy will not pay. Only Income currently offers a pre-existing condition extension as a declared add-on. If this applies to you, it is non-negotiable: either purchase Income with the extension, or buy a specialist plan designed for medical travellers.
MFA Travel Advisories
Travel to countries under Singapore’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) “Defer All Travel” or “Avoid All Travel” advisory is excluded by virtually all Singapore insurers. Check MFA travel advisories before and after purchasing your policy.
Adventure and High-Risk Activities
Skiing, snowboarding, rock climbing, bungee jumping, scuba diving below 30m, motorbiking, white-water rafting — standard policies exclude all of these. If you’re an active traveller, purchase an adventure sports rider (AIG and Income offer these) or a specialist plan. This is especially critical for annual plans used by travellers who regularly engage in activities across different trips.
Alcohol and Substance-Related Incidents
Claims arising from accidents while under the influence of alcohol or non-prescribed drugs are excluded across all Singapore insurers. This is a standard general insurance exclusion and unlikely to change.
Elective and Non-Emergency Treatment
Travel insurance covers emergency medical treatment — not planned overseas medical tourism, dental check-ups, or cosmetic procedures. If you travel to Thailand or Malaysia specifically for medical treatment, your travel insurance will not cover those procedure costs. Overseas emergency dental cover (e.g. an abscess or broken tooth causing acute pain) is covered under most plans up to a sublimit.
How to Make a Travel Insurance Claim in Singapore
The claims process can feel daunting if you’ve never done it before, but most Singapore insurers have streamlined the process considerably. Here’s what you need to know.
In a Medical Emergency Overseas
Call your insurer’s 24-hour emergency assistance hotline immediately — every reputable insurer has one. For serious treatment, seek pre-authorisation where possible. Your insurer can arrange direct billing with hospitals in their network or arrange cash advances if needed. Keep all medical reports, prescriptions, receipts, and discharge summaries.
For Trip Cancellation or Disruption
Notify your insurer as soon as you know the trip is cancelled or cut short. Gather supporting documentation: a doctor’s memo if illness is the cause, airline cancellation confirmation if disruption-related, a police report if theft or crime is involved. Submit within 30 days of returning to Singapore — most policies have strict submission windows.
For Baggage Loss or Delay
Report to the airline immediately and obtain a Property Irregularity Report (PIR). For theft, file a police report at the destination. Keep all receipts for emergency purchases (clothing, toiletries) if baggage is delayed — these may be reimbursable under your delay benefit.
Our Verdict: Which Travel Insurance Plan Should You Choose?
There is no single “best” plan for every Singaporean traveller — but there are clear best choices by profile.
For most travellers: FWD First or Income Preferred. Both offer S$1 million medical cover, unlimited evacuation, and competitive pricing. FWD wins on digital experience; Income wins if you have any pre-existing condition concerns.
For long-haul or frequent travellers: AIG TravelGuard Platinum. The S$1.5 million medical limit and global assistance network are worth the premium if you’re regularly travelling to the US, Europe, or Australia.
For families: Income Preferred family plan. Strong per-person limits, generous baggage cover, and the pre-existing condition extension make it the standout for mixed-age family groups.
For budget-conscious travellers on short ASEAN trips: Etiqa TripCare 360° Standard or FWD Basic. Medical limits are lower but sufficient for ASEAN, and pricing is aggressive, especially with promos.
For seniors (70+): Income is the safest bet for coverage up to age 85. Declare all conditions and confirm availability before purchasing.
Whichever plan you choose, don’t forget that travel insurance sits within your broader financial protection picture. If you haven’t reviewed your Integrated Shield Plan, Dependants’ Protection Scheme, or critical illness cover recently, a trip is a good reminder that financial gaps in one area can cascade. Speaking to a licensed financial adviser remains the gold standard for ensuring all your protection bases are covered.
Frequently Asked Questions About Travel Insurance in Singapore
Travel insurance in Singapore typically covers trip cancellation and curtailment, emergency medical expenses overseas, medical evacuation and repatriation, personal accident, baggage loss or damage, travel delay, and personal liability. Higher-tier plans also include COVID-19 related disruptions, rental vehicle excess, and sports or adventure activities. The exact coverage depends heavily on the insurer and the plan tier you choose — basic plans are lean on medical limits while premium plans can cover up to S$1 million in overseas medical expenses. When comparing plans, always read both the schedule of benefits and the exclusions section of the policy wording document before purchasing, rather than relying solely on marketing summaries.
For Europe travel, you need a plan with high medical coverage — at least S$500,000 and ideally S$1 million or more — and robust trip cancellation benefits, since flight disruptions are more common on long-haul routes. Insurers like AIG TravelGuard, Income Travel Insurance, and FWD Travel Insurance all offer strong Worldwide plans suitable for Europe. If you are visiting Schengen Zone countries (France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, and 22 others), your insurer must meet Schengen visa minimum requirements of €30,000 medical coverage — all reputable Singapore insurers satisfy this threshold. Additionally, healthcare costs vary dramatically across Europe: the UK, Switzerland, and Scandinavia are particularly expensive, so a higher medical limit is prudent. Travel delay benefits are also worth checking given the frequency of disruptions at major European hubs.
Most major Singapore travel insurers now include COVID-19 coverage as a standard feature in mid-to-premium tiers, though terms vary significantly between insurers and plan levels. Common covered scenarios include overseas hospitalisation due to COVID-19 diagnosis, trip cancellation if you test positive before departure (subject to policy terms), and overseas quarantine allowances (typically S$100–S$200 per day for a limited number of days). However, travel to a destination with an MFA “Defer All Travel” or “Avoid All Travel” advisory is typically excluded even if COVID-19 is the reason. Some plans also impose a waiting period from the policy purchase date before COVID-related cancellation claims are valid. Always check the COVID-19 addendum in your policy document carefully and confirm whether the plan covers a travel companion testing positive — not just you.
Travel insurance premiums in Singapore vary by destination zone, trip duration, plan tier, and the age of travellers on the policy. For a basic single-trip plan to ASEAN destinations, expect to pay S$20–S$40 for a one-week trip. Asia-wide coverage for the same duration typically costs S$35–S$70, while Worldwide plans run from S$60 to over S$150. Premium tiers with higher medical limits cost proportionally more. Annual multi-trip plans are priced between S$150 and S$450 for a single adult depending on coverage level, and typically become cost-effective versus buying single-trip plans if you travel three or more times per year. Promotional discounts of 20–40% are frequently available on insurer websites and aggregator platforms — it’s worth timing your purchase around these promotions, but never delay buying just to chase a discount.
Single-trip travel insurance covers one journey from your departure from Singapore through to your return, making it ideal if you travel internationally once or twice a year. Annual multi-trip plans cover an unlimited number of trips within 12 months, subject to a maximum trip duration per individual journey — commonly 30, 60, or 90 days per trip depending on the plan. If you travel three or more times a year, an annual plan almost always works out cheaper on a per-trip basis and removes the inconvenience of purchasing insurance before every trip. Annual plans also ensure you’re never accidentally uninsured because you forgot to buy coverage. Coverage quality on annual plans is generally equivalent to single-trip plans from the same insurer. Most major Singapore insurers — including AIG, Income, FWD, Etiqa, and Singlife — offer annual multi-trip options.
Standard travel insurance policies in Singapore do not automatically cover pre-existing medical conditions — conditions that you have been diagnosed with, treated for, or experienced symptoms of prior to purchasing your policy. This means if you have diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, chronic respiratory conditions, or any other ongoing health issue, and you suffer a related medical emergency abroad, your claim is likely to be denied under a standard policy. Income Travel Insurance is notably one of the only major Singapore travel insurers offering a Pre-Existing Medical Conditions extension, subject to declaration and insurer approval. If you have a chronic condition, you must disclose it during application and enquire specifically about extension availability and any associated premium loading. Failing to disclose known conditions is not just a claim risk — it may also void your policy entirely under the duty of disclosure obligation.
Medical evacuation cover pays for emergency air transport to bring you to a hospital that is capable of treating your condition — or, when medically appropriate, back to Singapore — in situations where local medical facilities are inadequate for your level of care. This benefit is critically important for travel to countries with underdeveloped healthcare systems, remote regions, or locations where specialist treatment is unavailable. The cost of a medical air ambulance can range from S$30,000 to over S$200,000 depending on distance and medical equipment required. Without evacuation cover, this is an out-of-pocket cost you bear entirely yourself. Most reputable Singapore travel insurance plans offer unlimited evacuation coverage as standard — this is one area where we strongly recommend not settling for a sublimited benefit. If a plan offers a capped evacuation limit of, say, S$150,000, consider whether that is sufficient for your destination.
In almost all cases, no. The vast majority of Singapore travel insurers require you to purchase the policy before your scheduled departure from Singapore. Many insurers allow purchase up to midnight of the day of departure, but once you have left Singapore, new policies generally cannot be issued. Purchasing insurance after departure defeats the fundamental principle of insurance — you cannot insure a risk that has already materialised or begun. If you are already overseas without coverage, options are extremely limited. A small number of specialist travel insurance products exist for people who are already abroad, but these are expensive, narrowly scoped, and not offered by mainstream Singapore insurers. The safest and most financially prudent practice is to purchase your travel insurance at the same time you book your flights and accommodation — this also gives you the maximum trip cancellation protection window if something prevents you from travelling.
When comparing travel insurance in Singapore, we recommend evaluating plans across ten dimensions: (1) Overseas medical expense limits — aim for S$250,000 minimum, S$500,000+ for long-haul or high-cost destinations; (2) Emergency evacuation limits — unlimited is the gold standard; (3) Trip cancellation and loss of deposit coverage — check both the limit and the list of covered reasons; (4) COVID-19 coverage terms — specific scenarios, limits, and waiting periods; (5) Baggage and travel documents limits — and critically, per-item sublimits for electronics; (6) Travel delay cash benefits — trigger period (usually 6 hours) and daily maximum; (7) Personal liability cover — especially important for travel to the US; (8) Exclusions — particularly for pre-existing conditions, extreme sports, and high-risk destinations; (9) Claims process quality — app-based vs. paper, speed of reimbursement; (10) Insurer’s financial strength and overall reputation. Do not choose purely on price — a S$20 premium difference is irrelevant if it means S$50,000 less in medical cover. Also cross-reference with your existing insurance portfolio to identify gaps.
This is one of the most frequently misunderstood aspects of travel insurance. Trip cancellation cover in a travel insurance policy is designed to protect you when you cannot travel due to covered events — your own illness, the death of a family member, natural disasters, or civil unrest. It is not a substitute for airline compensation when the airline itself cancels or delays your flight for operational reasons. When an airline cancels a flight, it is obligated under its conditions of carriage (and in many countries, under consumer protection regulations) to offer you a full refund or rebooking at no additional cost. Travel insurance comes into play for the consequential losses from that cancellation — such as non-refundable hotel nights, pre-paid tours, or accommodation costs from an extended delay. The travel delay benefit in most policies kicks in after a defined delay period (commonly 6 hours) and pays a daily cash amount regardless of who caused the delay.
The claim process varies by insurer but follows broadly consistent steps. First, report the incident promptly — for medical emergencies, call your insurer’s 24-hour emergency assistance hotline as early as possible; for theft, file a police report at the destination within 24 hours. Second, gather comprehensive documentation: medical reports, doctor’s letters, hospital receipts, police reports, airline correspondence confirming delays or cancellations, Property Irregularity Reports for lost baggage, and boarding passes. Third, submit your claim within the required window — most insurers require submission within 30 days of your return to Singapore, though some allow up to 60 days. Fourth, use your insurer’s preferred submission channel — FWD and some others offer fully digital app-based submission; AIG and Income have online portals; some still accept paper submissions. Always keep originals of key documents and submit certified copies. Pre-authorise major overseas medical treatments where time allows — this can significantly speed up the settlement process.
Travel insurance is not legally mandatory for Singapore citizens or permanent residents travelling abroad, with one significant exception: countries that require proof of travel insurance as a condition of entry or visa issuance. The most prominent example is the Schengen Zone — all 27 Schengen countries require Schengen visa applicants (which includes Singapore passport holders for some nationalities) to demonstrate travel insurance with at least €30,000 medical coverage and repatriation for the full duration of their stay. Even where not legally required, travel insurance is strongly recommended for all international travel given the potentially catastrophic financial exposure from overseas medical emergencies, evacuation costs, or significant trip disruption. MediShield Life and Integrated Shield Plans do not provide meaningful overseas medical coverage. The MAS regulates Singapore’s travel insurers under the Insurance Act, providing a layer of consumer protection, but does not mandate purchase for residents.
Standard travel insurance plans from Singapore insurers exclude most adventure and extreme sports activities as a default. Common exclusions include skiing and snowboarding, bungee jumping, rock climbing, scuba diving beyond recreational limits (typically 30m), white-water rafting, motorbiking (regardless of licence validity), skydiving, paragliding, and similar activities. If you intend to participate in any of these activities, you must either purchase an insurer that includes them in their standard plan — some include recreational scuba diving up to a defined depth — or add a specific adventure sports rider. AIG TravelGuard and Income Travel Insurance both offer winter/adventure sports extensions. Always declare your planned activities during application. A claim arising from an activity not disclosed or excluded will almost certainly be rejected, regardless of circumstances. If you’re unsure whether an activity qualifies, contact your insurer’s customer service team before travelling.
If you choose to extend your trip beyond the original policy end date, your travel insurance coverage lapses at the policy’s scheduled end date unless you proactively contact your insurer before expiry to arrange a formal extension. Most insurers permit this, provided you are not currently making a claim and your health status hasn’t changed materially. Premiums for the extension period will apply. If, however, you cannot return by your policy’s end date due to a covered event — such as hospitalisation or a medical condition preventing you from flying — most policies include an automatic extension of coverage. This automatic extension typically lasts until you are medically certified fit to travel, or for a defined maximum period (commonly 30 additional days). This automatic extension provision is an important feature to look for when comparing plans. It is particularly relevant for elderly travellers or those with underlying health concerns. Annual multi-trip plans are not affected, as long as each individual trip does not exceed the per-trip duration maximum specified in your policy.
Both approaches are legitimate, and the policy coverage you receive is identical regardless of purchase channel — the insurer issues the same policy document whether you buy via an aggregator or directly. Aggregator platforms allow you to compare multiple travel insurance plans side-by-side in a single session, which is time-efficient for initial research. They also frequently feature exclusive promotional discounts not available on the insurer’s own website, sometimes 25–40% off. On the other hand, buying directly from the insurer gives you access to their full range of products, riders, and customer service for any coverage questions before committing. Our recommended approach: use an aggregator to narrow your shortlist and check pricing, then visit the insurer’s website directly to read the full product disclosure sheet and policy wording before finalising your purchase. Never make a final decision based on the marketing summary alone — the exclusions section of the policy document is where the real information lives. For broader financial protection comparisons, SingaporeFinance.sg covers everything from health insurance to critical illness plans in one place.
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