Why insurance matters in Cape Verde
Cape Verde trips often combine international flights, resort nights, transfers, excursions and sometimes domestic island-hopping. A basic policy may be fine for a simple beach holiday, but travelers adding Santo Antão hikes, Fogo volcano routes, ferries or separate hotel bookings should read the wording more carefully. The goal is not to buy the most expensive policy; it is to avoid gaps around medical treatment, delays, missed connections and activities you already know you want to do.
Medical cover and emergency support
Start with medical cover, emergency assistance and repatriation. Cape Verde has health services, but serious cases may require specialist care or evacuation. Check policy limits, exclusions, pre-existing condition rules and whether the insurer has a 24-hour assistance line. Keep your policy number, emergency phone number and passport details saved offline so you are not searching through emails at the airport, hotel or during an excursion.
Flights, ferries and island hopping
Island hopping can make the trip richer, but separate ferry, domestic flight and hotel bookings can create connection risk. Look for missed departure, travel delay, unused accommodation and disruption wording. If you book flights, ferries and hotels separately, check whether the policy treats the itinerary as one connected trip or separate purchases. Build buffer time before your international departure, especially if returning from Santo Antão, Fogo or another island close to your flight home.
Activities, car hire and excursions
If your trip includes hiking, volcano walks, quad biking, boat trips, diving, kitesurfing or rental cars, read the activity and vehicle sections carefully. Some policies exclude higher-risk activities unless you add cover. Rental-car excess cover is also not always included. For Santo Antão, Fogo and remote beaches, a private driver or guide can be simpler than relying on a rental car and hoping your policy covers every road condition.
Booking checklist before purchase
Before buying, compare the destination covered, medical limit, cancellation limit, excess, activity cover, missed connection wording and claims documentation requirements. Save receipts for hotels, flights, transfers and tours. For families or group trips, check whether everyone is covered under one policy and whether valuables, phones and luggage limits are realistic. The best travel insurance is the one that matches your itinerary before anything goes wrong.

