International travel insurance adoption among Indian travellers rose 22% year-on-year in 2026, according to Policybazaar data, as flight disruptions, geopolitical uncertainty, and medical-cost concerns reshaped overseas travel decisions. The number of travellers buying coverage above $250,000 has roughly doubled, and trip cancellation ratios fell to 6.8% from 8.3% โ evidence that Indians are travelling smarter rather than cancelling. Yet 82% of Indian outbound travellers still skip travel protection entirely, signalling enormous remaining growth headroom.
A striking behavioural shift is underway among Indian international travellers: rather than abandoning overseas trips amid a turbulent geopolitical environment, they are increasingly insuring them. According to data from Policybazaar, India's largest insurance aggregator, international travel insurance adoption among Indian travellers rose 22% year-on-year in 2026, driven by heightened awareness of medical emergencies, flight disruptions, geopolitical tensions, and evacuation risks.
The data reveals a meaningful psychological change. For years, travel insurance in India was an afterthought โ a checkbox ticked during visa applications or a small add-on barely registered during booking. That is changing rapidly. The clearest evidence is in coverage levels: between 2022 and 2023, most travellers opted for basic cover of around $100,000; during 2024โ25, coverage moved toward the $100,000โ$250,000 range; and in 2026, cover above $250,000 is increasingly becoming the norm, with the number of travellers buying such high-value coverage roughly doubling. Travellers are prioritising medical coverage, chosen by nearly three-quarters of policy buyers, with cancellation protection accounting for almost half of add-on selections and evacuation coverage growing in popularity.
Importantly, the surge in insurance uptake has not been accompanied by a retreat from travel itself. Trip cancellation ratios actually fell to 6.8% in 2026 from 8.3% the prior year, according to travel protection provider Asego. As Policybazaar's travel insurance business head Manas Kapoor put it, Indian travellers are 'not pulling back due to geopolitical sensitivities โ they're simply travelling smarter.' The data shows a clear shift toward short-haul Asian destinations: Japan emerged as the fastest-growing destination with a 17% rise in bookings, followed by Thailand (+12%) and Vietnam (+7%), while Singapore and Malaysia saw stable demand. In sharp contrast, outbound travel to the UAE declined more than 70%, largely due to regional tensions and safety concerns linked to the proximity of the Gulf conflict zone, while travel to Europe and the US softened amid elevated airfares and airspace restrictions.
Despite the momentum, the opportunity remains vast: a striking 82% of Indian outbound travellers still skip travel protection altogether. With international travel expenses rising nearly 20โ25%, many travellers are shortening trips or shifting to nearby countries rather than cancelling โ a sign that the travel insurance market still has enormous room to grow as the product transitions from an afterthought to an essential part of trip planning.
Key Points
- 1International travel insurance adoption among Indian travellers rose 22% year-on-year in 2026 (Policybazaar)
- 2The number of travellers buying coverage above $250,000 has roughly doubled
- 3Trip cancellation ratios fell to 6.8% from 8.3% โ Indians are travelling smarter, not less
- 4Japan led destination growth (+17%); UAE bookings fell more than 70% on regional tensions
- 582% of Indian outbound travellers still skip travel protection, signalling vast growth headroom
Why This Matters
The surge in Indian travel insurance adoption reflects a broader maturation of India's insurance market โ already named the world's fastest-growing โ and a real-time behavioural response to global instability. For insurers and aggregators like Policybazaar, the doubling of high-value coverage purchases and the shift toward medical and evacuation protection signal both rising consumer sophistication and a lucrative growth segment. The 82% uninsured rate underscores how much of this market remains untapped. The destination data also offers a window into how geopolitical risk is rerouting global travel flows in real time.
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