# Travel & health insurance for a long stay in Chiang Mai

> An honest guide to travel insurance Chiang Mai and digital nomad health insurance: scooter clauses, evacuation cover, and what to check before you buy.

Insurance is the least glamorous thing you'll sort before a long stay, and the one you'll be most grateful for if anything goes sideways. Nobody buys it expecting to use it. But the day a scooter slides out from under you, or a fever turns into a hospital admission, the difference between a good policy and no policy is measured in thousands of pounds. Here's the straight version — no scaremongering, just what actually matters.

## Why it matters more than you think

Two assumptions catch people out. First, that your **home insurance or credit-card cover** stretches to months abroad — it usually doesn't, and most travel policies quietly cap out at 30, 60 or 90 days per trip. Second, that you'll be fine because Thai healthcare is cheap. It is, for the small stuff — our [healthcare guide](/blog/healthcare-chiang-mai) covers the excellent private hospitals here, and routine work like [dental care](/blog/dental-care-chiang-mai) is cheap enough that many visitors treat it as a dental-tourism trip in its own right. But **there's no free public system for foreigners**, and while a GP visit costs pocket change, a serious admission, surgery or — the big one — a **medical evacuation home** can run to tens of thousands. That last item is the reason insurance exists. You're not really insuring against a doctor's visit; you're insuring against the rare, ruinous event.

![Travel & health insurance for a long stay in Chiang Mai](/blog/travel-insurance-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## The scooter reality

This is the part too many travellers skip, so read it twice. **Road accidents are the single most common serious claim for visitors in Thailand**, and the scooter is usually involved. Here's the catch: a great many travel policies **exclude motorbike injuries** unless you meet two conditions — you held a **valid licence** (often a motorcycle endorsement, not just a car licence) *and* you were **wearing a helmet**. No helmet, no payout. Wrong licence, no payout. It doesn't matter that the rental shop handed you the keys without asking.

If you plan to ride — and most people here end up on two wheels — read our [scooter guide](/blog/renting-a-scooter-chiang-mai) alongside your policy's fine print, and confirm in writing that **motorbike use is covered at your engine size** (Thai rentals are typically 110–125cc). A few nomad-focused plans cover small scooters more readily than traditional travel insurers, but never assume — check the actual clause.

## Short-trip cover vs long-stay health insurance

Roughly, there are three families. **Short-trip travel insurance** (Heymondo, World Nomads and similar) is built for holidays — fine for a few weeks, but it expires and isn't designed for living somewhere. **Subscription-style nomad plans** like **SafetyWing Nomad Insurance** and **Genki** renew monthly and suit footloose long-stayers; they're flexible and reasonably priced, though benefits and exclusions vary. **Comprehensive expat / international health plans** like **Cigna Global** and **IMG Global** cost more but offer fuller cover, higher limits and often better handling of pre-existing conditions — sensible if you're older, settling in, or managing a condition. And don't overlook **Thailand-local insurers** — Pacific Cross, April International, AXA Thailand — which know the hospitals and frequently offer **direct billing**, so you don't front the bill and claim it back. If you're weighing the maths of a longer stay, our [cost-of-living guide](/blog/cost-of-living-chiang-mai) puts the monthly premium in context.

## What to actually check before you buy

Skim past the marketing and look for these:

- **The motorbike clause** — licence and helmet conditions, and engine-size limit.
- **Coverage limits and deductibles** — a high limit with a manageable excess beats a low limit you'll blow through in one admission.
- **Pre-existing conditions** — declare them; an undeclared condition is the classic reason a claim gets refused.
- **Medical evacuation and repatriation** — non-negotiable. This is the expensive bit you can't self-fund.
- **Trips home and onward travel** — some plans cover visits back to your home country, some don't; matters if you'll be doing [visa runs](/blog/visa-runs-chiang-mai) or popping home.
- **The claims process** — direct billing vs pay-and-reclaim, and how responsive support is when it's 2am and you're stressed.

There's also a **visa angle**: the LTR visa requires proof of health cover (commonly USD 50,000 minimum), and while the DTV doesn't officially mandate it, some consulates ask anyway — so a policy can double as paperwork. Keep the certificate handy.

## The honest bottom line

Buy cover that genuinely fits *your* trip length, *your* riding habits and *your* health — not the cheapest box ticked in a hurry. Read the motorbike clause before you read anything else. None of this should stop you enjoying the place; Chiang Mai is a calm, easy base, as our [safety guide](/blog/is-chiang-mai-safe) lays out. Sort the cover once, file the paperwork, and forget about it — that's exactly the boring outcome you want. Once you've landed and settled in with us, ask the house team if you're unsure who to call locally; we'll point you to the nearest right door.
