Trip interruption insurance covers the cost of cutting a trip short for specific, covered reasons and is different from trip cancellation insurance, which applies before you depart. This article breaks down when interruption coverage kicks in, what it typically reimburses, common exclusions, and how it stacks up against cancellation and optional add-ons. Keep these distinctions in mind so you know when a policy will actually protect your wallet and when it won’t.
Trip interruption insurance steps in when you are already traveling and must return home early for a covered reason like a serious illness, a disabling injury, or a death in the family. It usually reimburses prepaid, nonrefundable expenses for the unused portion of your trip and may cover transportation home. Policies vary, so checking the list of covered reasons in your plan is essential before relying on the protection.
Typical covered reasons include disabling injuries or illnesses that prevent you from continuing, the death of a traveler or immediate family member, financial collapse of a travel carrier, and certain weather or natural disaster events that force you to miss a large portion of your trip. Some plans also cover being in a traffic accident on your travel day if that prevents you from leaving or returning. Documentation such as medical records or police reports is often required to support a claim.
There are clear exclusions to watch for: trip interruption only applies to events that happen after your trip begins, so anything known or happening before departure usually falls under trip cancellation rules. Known events, like an approaching hurricane already forecast before your trip, are commonly excluded, and simply changing your mind or wanting to return early is not a covered reason. Reading the fine print about timing and preexisting condition waivers can prevent surprise denials.
Trip interruption can reimburse a range of prepaid, nonrefundable expenses, typically including unused flights, hotels, tours, cruises, and excursions. Many policies will also cover reasonable costs to get you home, which can be a major financial relief when plans collapse mid-trip. Refundable bookings are normally not part of a claim since you can cancel and recoup those costs directly.
The claims process generally follows a predictable sequence: you must have a covered reason, notify your insurer promptly, collect documentation, submit a claim, and then wait for review and reimbursement. Timely notification is often a strict requirement, and failing to alert the provider within the policy’s required window can cost you the claim. Keeping receipts and notes while you travel speeds up the process and reduces back-and-forth with claim adjusters.
Cancel for any reason, or CFAR, is an optional add-on that expands what counts as an allowable cancellation before your trip starts, but it does not replace interruption coverage once you’re already traveling. CFAR gives flexibility before departure at a higher price and typically has its own rules and time limits. For many travelers, CFAR is useful only if they want broad cancellation rights before departure rather than interruption protection mid-trip.
Cost-wise, trip interruption is frequently bundled into standard travel insurance packages that also include trip cancellation and other protections; comprehensive plans typically run between about 4% to 10% of the total trip cost. For a $5,000 itinerary, that translates to roughly $200 to $500 for a full travel insurance package depending on coverage limits and add-ons. Some premium credit cards include trip interruption benefits, so checking existing card protections can avoid paying for redundant coverage.
There are common misconceptions to clear up: you cannot interrupt your trip for any reason and expect reimbursement, interruption does not cover problems that existed before travel, and it does not substitute for cancellation insurance that applies before departure. If your trip is expensive, long, includes many stops, or features nonrefundable bookings, interruption insurance often makes sense because the potential loss is higher. Weigh your itinerary complexity and nonrefundable exposure when deciding whether to buy a standalone policy or rely on card benefits.
Travel insurance: What it covers, costs, and how to choose the right policy
