Travel Insurance + eSIM: What Is Actually Covered?
eSIM plans are affordable enough that most travelers do not think about insuring them — but your phone, laptop, and connected devices are another matter. Here is a clear breakdown of what travel insurance covers, what it does not, and how to protect yourself before and during travel.
What standard travel insurance covers
A typical travel insurance policy covers four core areas:
- **Trip cancellation / interruption**: reimbursement if you cancel or cut short your trip for a covered reason (illness, family emergency, weather)
- **Medical emergencies**: hospital and treatment costs abroad, emergency evacuation
- **Lost or delayed luggage**: compensation for bags lost by airlines
- **Travel delays**: meals and accommodation during significant delays
None of these directly cover eSIM data costs. Your $15 eSIM plan is a travel expense, not an insurable event.
Does travel insurance cover your phone or laptop?
Electronics coverage varies enormously by policy — this is the section that matters most for eSIM users:
| Coverage type | Typical terms |
|---|---|
| Theft (with police report) | Usually covered, subject to deductible |
| Accidental damage | Often excluded or limited |
| Loss (mysterious disappearance) | Often excluded |
| Unattended items | Almost always excluded |
| Pre-existing damage | Never covered |
Deductibles for electronics claims range from $100 to $500, and coverage limits are typically $500–$2,000. If your phone costs $1,200 and your deductible is $300, you recover $900 after filing a claim with documentation.