Single-Trip vs Multi-Trip Travel Insurance
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If you travel more than once or twice a year, an annual multi-trip plan can be the smarter buy. Here’s how to tell which one fits — without overpaying.
Quick answer: Buy a single-trip plan if you’re taking one trip; buy an annual multi-trip plan if you take several trips a year, because it covers an unlimited number of trips within the year (each up to a maximum trip length). The break-even is usually around two to three trips a year.
How each one works
| Single-trip | Multi-trip / annual | |
|---|---|---|
| Covers | One specific trip, set dates | Unlimited trips for 12 months, each up to the per-trip day cap you select: 2, 5, 10, 15, 20, 35 or 60 days (travel within Canada is auto-covered beyond the cap on the Worldwide plan) |
| Best for | One vacation a year, or a long single trip | Frequent travellers, cross-border commuters, snowbirds with several getaways (a 5% renewal discount applies on annual renewal) |
| Trip length | Matches your exact dates | Each individual trip capped at the plan’s per-trip max |
| Price logic | Priced for that one trip | One annual premium; cheaper per trip the more you travel |
How to decide
- One trip this year? → Single-trip.
- Two or more trips, each short? → Run the numbers on annual multi-trip; it often wins.
- One very long trip (e.g. a 5-month snowbird stay)? → A single-trip or extended plan — annual per-trip caps may not fit. See the snowbird page.
- Travel for work across the border often? → Annual multi-trip is usually the simplest.
The honest advisor note
Annual plans only save money if you actually take the trips. And per-trip length caps matter — a multi-trip plan with a 15-day cap won’t cover a 3-week vacation. The quote shows your real numbers for both, so you don’t guess.
FAQ
Does an annual plan cover unlimited trips?
Yes — typically an unlimited number of trips within the 12 months, but each individual trip is capped at the plan’s maximum trip length. Confirm the per-trip cap before you buy.
Which is cheaper?
It depends entirely on how many trips you take and how long they are. For one trip, single-trip is usually cheaper; for several, annual usually wins. The quote compares them for your actual plans.
✓
Reviewed by a licensed agent. General guidance only — your right plan depends on your travel, which the quote confirms. Regulated by FSRA.
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