Why people compare coverage for Canada
- - US citizens with family ties, cross-border workers, and long-stay visitors
- - Provincial systems do not replace visitor coverage; verify residency eligibility and private supplemental coverage.
- - Canada may require different coverage thinking for residents, short visitors, medical travelers, students, workers, and retirees.
Planned treatment is different from travel emergencies
- - Ordinary travel medical insurance usually focuses on unexpected illness or injury while traveling.
- - Planned surgery, dental care, fertility care, cosmetic care, complications, revisions, and follow-up may be excluded.
- - Ask for written answers before paying a provider deposit or booking flights.
Documents to request
- - Full policy wording, not only a brochure.
- - Exclusions and pre-existing condition rules.
- - Provider network or direct-billing instructions.
- - Evacuation, repatriation, and emergency assistance rules.
- - Claim forms and reimbursement requirements.
Questions to ask the insurer
- - Does this coverage apply in Canada for my residency or travel status?
- - Does it cover planned treatment or only unexpected illness and injury?
- - Are complications, follow-up, medication, evacuation, and return-home care covered?
- - Which hospitals can bill directly, and which require reimbursement claims?
- - What must be preauthorized before care starts?