We don’t sell it.
We tell you what your destination requires.

Daffodils Travel does not sell, administer, or underwrite travel insurance. What we do: tell you exactly what coverage South Asia destinations require — including the high-altitude evacuation coverage that standard US policies often exclude — and refer you to trusted providers.

Our Position on Insurance

“We have partnered with Arch RoamRight to help our clients access travel insurance. The wrong policy — or no policy — is the most expensive mistake a South Asia traveler can make.”
Referral providers are reviewed periodically. This page is the single source of truth. If providers change, this page is updated first.

NOT SOLD HERE

Daffodils Travel is a ground itinerary specialist. We have partnered with Arch RoamRight to offer our clients access to travel insurance options.

COVERAGE MATTERS MOST IN SOUTH ASIA

Nepal and Bhutan require high-altitude medical evacuation cover that standard US policies frequently exclude.

READ THIS BEFORE PURCHASING ANY POLICY

The five questions below should be answered in writing by any insurer before you purchase.

COVERAGE BY DESTINATION

What your policy should cover — for each country.

The coverage you need varies significantly by destination. India and Sri Lanka have different requirements from Nepal and Bhutan. If your circuit includes Nepal or Bhutan, your policy needs specific attention before purchase.

First, two medical benefits people confuse. Travel policies split medical protection into two separate benefits, each with its own limit — read them separately:

  • Emergency Medical Expense — pays for treatment itself (hospital, doctor, medication) if you’re ill or injured on the trip. For South Asia, $50,000 or more is generally adequate, because the most serious cases are moved to a major hospital where treatment costs far less than in the US.
  • Emergency Medical Evacuation — helps pay for transportation to the nearest Hospital or medical facility where suitable Medically Necessary treatment is available. This is the benefit that matters most in Nepal and Bhutan, and it carrier a larger benefit limit – often $250,000 to $1,000,000.

 
The large evacuation and transfer costs shown further down this page are paid from the Emergency Medical Evacuation benefit, not from your medical-expense limit. So a policy with, for example, $50,000 in medical expense paired with $500,000–$1,000,000 in evacuation is well-suited to high-altitude South Asia. Compare the two limits separately — don’t look for a single “medical” number.

India

Emergency medical expense from $50,000 • Emergency medical evacuation from $250,000

Medical facilities vary by region. Major cities have international hospitals; remote Rajasthan, the Himalayan foothills, and rural Kerala may require transfer to the nearest city for serious illness. Aim for at least $50,000 in emergency medical expense, paired with at least $250,000 in emergency medical evacuation. These are two separate benefits on most policies — confirm both.

Trip cancellation and interruption

Festival-season India (Diwali, Holi, Pushkar Camel Fair) involves non-refundable accommodation commitments booked months ahead. Trip cancellation coverage protects these costs. Confirm Force Majeure and civil disruption coverage specifically.

Stomach illness / medical

Gastrointestinal illness in the first few days is common for first-time India visitors. Standard medical coverage handles this — confirm the policy covers outpatient treatment, not just hospitalization.

Baggage and valuables

Standard coverage. Note that some policies have low sub-limits for electronics — confirm if you are carrying camera equipment or similar high-value items.

Nepal

Helicopter evacuation from altitude — we strongly recommend

A helicopter evacuation from Everest Base Camp (5,364m) costs USD $5,000–50,000. Standard US policies frequently exclude high-altitude activities unless explicitly added. Ask: "Does this policy cover helicopter evacuation from above 4,000m in Nepal?" Get the answer in writing.

High-altitude trekking or activity cover

Even the Annapurna Base Camp trail reaches 4,130m. Even the Everest viewpoint at Kala Patthar is 5,643m. Trekking exclusions in standard policies often apply from 3,000m. Confirm your specific trek or itinerary altitude with the insurer.

Emergency medical expense from $50,000 • Emergency medical evacuation from $250,000 (higher is better)

Evacuation to an international-standard hospital (typically Bangkok or Delhi) is paid from the evacuation benefit — which is why that limit should be high; $250,000 or more is sensible for any altitude itinerary, and many strong policies carry far higher. Emergency medical expense from $50,000 is generally adequate, since serious cases are evacuated to hospitals where treatment costs less than in the US. Confirm both limits separately, in writing.

Trip interruption — altitude-related

AMS (acute mountain sickness) can require descending and ending a trek early. Trip interruption coverage protects pre-paid ground costs if the itinerary must be abandoned for a medical reason.

Bhutan

Helicopter evacuation from altitude

Tiger's Nest monastery hike peaks at 3,140m. The Chelela Pass is at 3,988m. Any extension into eastern Bhutan or the Himalayan valleys takes you higher. The same altitude evacuation question applies as for Nepal: ask in writing, confirm explicitly.

Trip cancellation — Bhutan-specific

Bhutan accommodation during Tsechu festivals is booked 9–12 months ahead and is often non-refundable. Festival-season cancellation exposure is higher than any other destination in our portfolio. Confirm cancellation coverage covers pre-paid non-refundable accommodation.

Emergency medical expense from $50,000 • Emergency medical evacuation from $250,000 (higher is better)

Medical facilities in Bhutan are limited; serious illness requires evacuation to India (Kolkata or Delhi) or Bangkok. The transfer cost is paid from the evacuation benefit, so keep that limit high — $250,000 or more. Emergency medical expense from $50,000 is generally adequate for treatment once you reach an international-standard hospital. Confirm both, in writing.

SDF — not insurable

The Bhutan Sustainable Development Fee is a government levy, not a service charge. It is generally not recoverable via travel insurance in the event of trip cancellation. Budget for it as a committed cost from day one.

Sri Lanka

Standard comprehensive cover — generally adequate

Sri Lanka does not have the high-altitude requirements of Nepal and Bhutan. Standard comprehensive US travel insurance is generally sufficient. However, confirm the three items below before purchasing.

Water sports / adventure activities

Surfing at Arugam Bay on the east coast. White-water rafting near Kitulgala. Whale watching (sea conditions can change). Some standard policies exclude adventure activities — confirm if your itinerary includes any.

Missed or canceled excursions

Weather cancellations for whale watching at Mirissa are not uncommon. Confirm your policy covers missed pre-paid excursions due to weather or operator cancellation.

Emergency medical expense from $50,000 • Emergency medical evacuation from $100,000

Colombo has good private hospital facilities; rural or coastal areas may require transfer. Emergency medical expense from $50,000 is generally sufficient. If your Sri Lanka circuit extends into Nepal or Bhutan, raise the evacuation benefit to $250,000 or more for the high-altitude legs.

This page provides general information, not insurance advice. Daffodils Travel is not a licensed insurance producer and does not sell, underwrite, or administer insurance. The coverage amounts and requirements described above are general guidance for travel in South Asia, not policy terms. The actual coverage, limits, conditions, and exclusions of any policy are determined solely by that policy. Refer to the policy for full details, definitions, and exclusions. The choice of insurer and policy is entirely the traveler’s responsibility.
THE NUMBERS THAT MATTER

A helicopter evacuation from the Himalayas is not a theoretical risk.

This is the single most expensive oversight in South Asia travel planning. Standard US policies frequently exclude high-altitude activities. The exclusion is in the policy documents — not in the summary brochure. It must be confirmed in writing before purchase.

Ask every insurer: "Does this policy cover helicopter evacuation from above 4,000m in Nepal or Bhutan?" If they cannot confirm this clearly in writing, choose a different policy.

 

Most figures below are paid from your policy's Emergency Medical Evacuation benefit — the transfer from a local hospital to an international-standard one (Bangkok, Delhi, or Singapore). The initial response to get you to the nearest facility is typically covered under your Emergency Medical Expense benefit. Evacuation and medical expenses are two separate limits — and for Nepal and Bhutan, the evacuation benefit is the one to keep high.

Helicopter to Kathmandu from Everest Base Camp (5,364m)
$5,000–15,000
Evacuation from EBC + international hospital (Bangkok / Delhi)
$15,000–50,000
Helicopter from Annapurna Circuit (3,500–4,000m)
$3,000–8,000
Medical evacuation from Bhutan to India
$5,000–20,000
Figures are indicative ranges based on industry data. Actual costs depend on departure point, weight, weather, and aircraft availability.
BEFORE YOU PURCHASE

Five questions to ask any insurer — in writing.

These five questions apply to any South Asia itinerary. The answers reveal whether the policy is genuinely adequate — or whether it will fail at the moment you need it most.

Do not accept verbal answers. Ask by email or via the insurer's web chat so you have the response in writing.

For Nepal and Bhutan: Questions 1 and 2 are what we strongly recommend. A policy that cannot answer both clearly and positively in writing is not adequate for high-altitude South Asia travel.

Does this policy cover helicopter evacuation from above 4,000m altitude — specifically in Nepal and Bhutan?

The most important question for any Nepal or Bhutan itinerary. Standard exclusions often apply from 3,000m or 3,500m. The answer must be explicit and in writing. If the answer is 'it depends on the activity', ask again specifically for trekking and mountain terrain.

Is emergency medical evacuation a separate benefit — and does it cover transport to an international-standard hospital outside Nepal or Bhutan?

On most policies, evacuation is a distinct benefit from medical expense, usually with a much higher limit. Confirm the evacuation benefit explicitly and note its limit — this is the figure that matters most at altitude.

Does trip cancellation coverage apply to pre-paid non-refundable accommodation booked months in advance?

Festival-season India and Bhutan Tsechu accommodation is often booked 6–12 months ahead, fully non-refundable. Confirm that the policy covers cancellation of pre-paid bookings — not just airfares. Confirm whether Force Majeure is covered and what the definition of Force Majeure includes.

Are adventure activities on my specific itinerary covered — trekking, safari, water sports, paragliding?

Many standard policies exclude 'adventure sports' without defining the term clearly. Trekking above certain altitudes, jeep safaris, surfing, rafting, and even whale watching excursions in rough seas can fall under exclusions. List your specific planned activities and ask whether each is covered.

What is the 24-hour assistance number, and is it staffed by people with South Asia expertise?

In a medical emergency at altitude, the assistance number is the difference between a good outcome and a bad one. Some assistance providers are excellent. Others are generic call centres with no South Asia ground network. Ask who provides the assistance service and whether they have experience in Nepal and Bhutan specifically.

Arrange your policy early

Travel insurance is most valuable when arranged soon after your first trip payment. With Arch RoamRight, purchasing within 21 days of your initial trip payment can unlock benefits that are not available later — including a waiver of the pre-existing medical condition exclusion and “cancel for work reasons” coverage. We recommend arranging your policy as soon as your first payment is made. Eligibility, conditions, and exclusions are governed by the policy — refer to the policy for full details.

Why we refer clients to Arch RoamRight

We refer clients to Arch RoamRight for its well-regarded claims service and 24-hour travel assistance, competitive pricing, and convenient tools such as online claims filing. As always, the policy you choose — and whether it fits your trip —is your decision.

CURRENT REFERRAL

Our preferred travel insurance provider.

We have partnered with Arch RoamRight to offer our clients access to travel insurance options. The choice of provider and the specific policy purchased is entirely the client's decision and responsibility.

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Arch RoamRight

Arch Insurance Company

Arch RoamRight is a premier provider of travel insurance and travel medical plans for leisure, business, student, and group travelers. A division of Arch Insurance Company, a global specialty insurer with an A+ (Superior) rating from AM Best – plans typically include comprehensive medical, trip cancellation, interruption, baggage, and 24-hour travel assistance. Check with Arch directly for specific high-altitude coverage confirmation.
Active signed partner. Daffodils Travel is a signed Travel Retailer partner of Arch RoamRight. Get a quote directly to explore plans and confirm coverage for your South Asia itinerary.

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Important: Daffodils Travel does not sell, underwrite, or administer travel insurance. We have partnered with Arch RoamRight to offer our clients access to travel insurance options. The choice of provider, the specific policy, and all insurance decisions are entirely the client’s responsibility. Daffodils Travel accepts no liability in connection with any insurance policy purchased or not purchased by a client.

Referral providers are reviewed periodically. This Travel Insurance — is the single source of truth. If our referrals change, this page is updated first. Any other Daffodils document that references insurance providers defers to this page.

YOUR JOURNEY STARTS HERE

The itinerary comes first. Insurance follows immediately after.

Once we deliver your completed itinerary, we will confirm which coverage questions are relevant to your specific routing and destinations.

CA Seller of Travel Reg. No. 2163233-70 · ASTA Member · Chief Travel Advisor · Ground itinerary specialists