Short answer
Travel medical insurance is mainly for unexpected care while traveling.
Travel medical insurance generally focuses on unexpected illness or injury, not routine care or planned treatment.
For Greece, travelers should also think about city access, emergency hospital payment, evacuation, pre-existing condition rules, claim documents, and whether any planned care is excluded.
Trip emergency medical
- - Medical maximum
- - Deductible
- - Primary vs secondary payment
- - Country restrictions
- - Pre-existing condition waiver
Evacuation and repatriation
- - Medical evacuation
- - Return-home transport
- - Repatriation
- - Who decides transport
- - Remote-area limitations
Claim documents
- - Itemized bill
- - Medical report
- - Proof of payment
- - Diagnosis/procedure documents
- - Translation requirements
Usually separate
- - Planned treatment
- - Routine care
- - Dental tourism
- - Cosmetic care
- - Long-term expat coverage
Cities and regions to think about
A policy that looks fine for a major city may still need evacuation review for islands, rural areas, adventure travel, or remote work outside the capital.
Do not confuse travel coverage with planned treatment coverage
If you are going to Greece for surgery, dental care, fertility treatment, cosmetic care, hair transplant, bariatric care, or another planned procedure, read the policy wording and get written answers. Ordinary travel medical insurance may exclude planned treatment and related complications.
Planned Care Insurance Questions