Home Safety & Health Best Travel Insurance for South Korea 2026
Safety & Health Updated April 2026

Best Travel Insurance for South Korea 2026

Korea is safe, but hospitals want payment on the spot — here is how to pick travel insurance that actually protects you.

InfoSouthKorea.com · Independent guide · Not affiliated with any government

Why You Need Travel Insurance for Korea

Korea is one of the safest countries you can visit, but that does not mean nothing goes wrong. People slip in the snow on Bukhansan, get food poisoning at a late-night street stall, catch flu, break a wrist on an icy escalator, or have a scooter graze them in Hongdae. When that happens, Korean hospitals expect you to pay upfront — and without the National Health Insurance Service (NHIS), those bills come out of your card on the spot.

A simple clinic visit might be ₩50,000 to ₩100,000, but an ER trip with imaging and a night of observation easily reaches ₩1-3 million. Medical evacuation back home for something serious can run into tens of thousands of dollars. Travel insurance exists for exactly this scenario, and for most travelers it costs less than a single nice dinner in Seoul per week.

This is general guidance, not financial or insurance advice. Always read the policy document yourself and confirm Korea is covered before you buy.

What to Look For in a Policy

Not all travel insurance is equal. A budget policy that only covers lost luggage is next to useless if your real concern is medical. The four things that matter most are medical limit, emergency evacuation, trip interruption, and what is explicitly excluded.

  • Medical limit of at least $100,000 — $250,000 is better.
  • Emergency medical evacuation and repatriation of at least $250,000.
  • Trip interruption and cancellation cover equal to your non-refundable costs.
  • Baggage, delay, and electronics cover (check per-item caps).
  • Adventure-activity rider if you plan to ski, hike, scuba dive, or ride a scooter.
Many cheap policies exclude scooter and motorbike accidents unless you hold a valid motorcycle license at home. If you plan to rent a scooter on Jeju, confirm this in writing.

Top Insurance Options in 2026

The best choice depends on how you travel. Short-trip tourists usually want a traditional per-trip policy; long-term travelers and digital nomads tend to prefer subscription-style cover that rolls monthly. Below is a rough snapshot of the most commonly used options among independent travelers visiting Korea.

ProviderBest ForTypical PriceNotes
SafetyWing Nomad InsuranceLong stays, nomads, backpackers~$45 USD / 4 weeksSubscription, auto-renews, Korea included
World NomadsAdventure travelers, hikersVaries by tripCovers many adventure sports; claim online
IMG Global (Patriot)Comprehensive medicalVaries by age & tripHigh limits, strong evacuation
Allianz / AXATraditional short tripsVariesWidely recognized, good cancellation cover

Prices and terms change often. Always quote the exact dates of your trip and your home country — the same product can cost very different amounts depending on where you buy from. Read the policy document before you click buy.

How Claims Actually Work

In Korea, the typical flow is: you pay at the hospital with your credit card, collect every receipt and a Korean-English diagnosis letter, then submit a claim online when you are back at your hotel. Most providers want photos of the receipts, a short description of what happened, and any relevant police or incident report.

Ask the hospital billing desk for an itemized English receipt at checkout. If they do not have one, at least ask for a copy with the doctor's stamp — it makes the claim much easier later.
  • Keep every receipt, including pharmacy ones.
  • Photograph everything before you leave the hospital.
  • Submit the claim as soon as you can — most insurers want it within 30-90 days.
  • If anything is stolen, file a police report (112) and get a copy.
If you are badly hurt and cannot afford to pay upfront, call your insurance 24/7 assistance line first — they can sometimes arrange a direct guarantee of payment with the hospital.
Back to Safety & Health

Preguntas Frecuentes

Is travel insurance required for South Korea?

No, it is not legally required to enter Korea, but it is strongly recommended because foreign visitors pay upfront at hospitals and bills can be very high without coverage.

How much does travel insurance for Korea cost?

Short-trip policies for a one or two week visit typically run from about $20 to $80 depending on age and coverage. Long-term plans like SafetyWing are about $45 per four weeks.

Does travel insurance cover COVID-19 in Korea?

Most reputable 2026 policies now cover COVID medical treatment as a regular illness, but trip cancellation due to COVID is sometimes excluded. Check the wording before you buy.

Can I buy travel insurance after I arrive in Korea?

Some providers like SafetyWing allow you to start coverage while already abroad, though pre-existing conditions and some claims may be limited. Always buy before you travel when possible.