Travel insurance
Travel insurance for Philippines
Short-trip cover for visits to Philippines — emergency medical, trip-cancellation, luggage, the usual travel-insurance stack. Designed for weeks-not-years stays.
Philippines for digital nomads, perpetual travelers and expats: visa rules, real treatment costs in USD, and the long-term cover that actually works.
What travel insurance covers in Philippines
Travel insurance is built for short trips (under 3 months), vacations, weekend trips, gig travel. The lines below are the base — exact terms are carrier-specific, so always check the policy document for the Philippines situation you care about.
What you get
- Emergency medical and dental
- Trip cancellation and interruption
- Lost or delayed baggage
- Travel-document theft
- Adventure-sport add-ons (some plans)
What it won't do
- Routine care, chronic-condition management
- Maternity, mental-health
- Trips longer than the policy's max (often 90 days)
Typical local costs in Philippines
What insurance protects you from. Costs vary by region inside Philippinesand between public and private facilities — these are the numbers we've seen most often in 2026.
| GP visit | 10 to 30 private GP; 25 to 80 at tertiary private hospitals and international clinics |
|---|---|
| Hospital / day | 40 to 250 standard private room Metro Manila; up to 335 top-tier; ICU ~500 excl. doctor/labs/meds |
| Emergency room | 25 to 260 private (PHP 1,500-15,000); public ER from ~5 |
| Dental | 12 to 50 standard cleaning + polish; higher at expat-focused clinics |
| Flight home (medical) | 12,000 to 25,000 regional medical-jet evac (Manila to Singapore or Tokyo); commercial stretcher transfers can cut cost 50-80% |
All prices in USD. Ranges reflect private-sector quotes; public-sector costs are lower but rarely available to short-term foreigners.
Healthcare in Philippines: what you're dealing with
Philippines has two sides to its healthcare system. Two-tier. Public cheap but overcrowded and under-resourced. Private in Manila/Cebu (St Luke's, Makati Medical, Asian Hospital, Chong Hua) high quality with English-speaking often US-trained doctors. Expats not eligible for PhilHealth subsidies and must pay full fees, usually upfront in cash. Quality drops sharply outside Metro Manila/Cebu
Nomads and expats typically use private clinics in Manila (BGC and Makati). With an international long-term plan, you choose the clinic yourself and, where possible, the insurer pays the hospital directly so you do not have to cover a large bill on the spot.
What to watch out for in Philippines
The biggest real risks in Philippines are concrete and country-specific, not abstract.
Typhoons June-November, dengue (up 34% in 2026), earthquakes and volcanic activity, road traffic accidents, petty theft and scams in tourist areas, terrorism/kidnapping risk in parts of Mindanao, flash floods and landslides
Risk level: Moderate. Safe in main tourist/nomad hubs; elevated risk in parts of Mindanao (Sulu, Basilan, Tawi-Tawi, western Mindanao) for terrorism and kidnapping. Typhoon season June-November, dengue year-round, seismic activity (7.8 quake off Mindanao June 2026). Good cover pays for both the treatment and the transfer to a specialist clinic.
FAQ
Other insurance for Philippines
Different stages of nomad life need different cover. Here's the full set we've mapped for Philippines.
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