His parents were visiting from Pune for 10 weeks. His father is 68, has mild hypertension. He’d found two plans – one for $60/month, one for $180/month.
“Mani, both say they cover hospitalization. Why is one three times more expensive?”
That’s exactly the right question to ask.
The answer comes down to two fundamentally different types of visitor insurance plans – fixed benefit and comprehensive.
Most NRIs don’t know the difference until they need to file a claim. By then, it’s too late.
Let me explain both clearly, so you can make the right choice before your parents travel.
A fixed benefit plan pays a set dollar amount per treatment – no matter what the actual bill is.
A comprehensive plan pays a percentage of the actual bill – after your deductible.
That one difference changes everything when a real emergency happens.
How Fixed Benefit Plans Work
Think of a fixed plan like a voucher system.
The plan says: “If your parent is hospitalized, we’ll pay $1,500 per day. If they need surgery, we’ll pay $3,000. If they visit the ER, we’ll pay $500.”
Sounds reasonable until you see a real US hospital bill.
A single day in a US hospital can cost $8,000 to $15,000. The plan pays $1,500. You pay the rest.
An ER visit for a cardiac scare can cost $12,000. The plan pays $500. You pay the rest.
The gap between what fixed plans pay and what US hospitals actually charge is enormous. That gap comes out of your pocket.
How Comprehensive Plans Work
Comprehensive plans work more like actual insurance.
You choose a deductible – say $500.
If your parent’s hospital bill is $40,000, you pay the $500 deductible first. After that, the insurance covers 80% of the remaining $39,500. You pay the other 20% – which is $7,900.
Your total out of pocket: $8,400.
Without any insurance: $40,000.
With a fixed plan that pays $1,500/day for 4 days: you get $6,000 back. You still owe $34,000.
The difference is significant. And it only gets more significant as the bills get larger.
A Direct Comparison
Scenario
Actual Bill
Fixed Plan Pays
Comprehensive Pays
You Owe (Comprehensive)
ER visit (cardiac scare)
$12,000
$500
~$9,200
~$2,800
Hospitalization (3 days)
$36,000
$4,500
~$28,400
~$7,600
Hip fracture + surgery
$95,000
$8,000
~$75,600
~$19,900
These are estimates based on typical US medical costs and a comprehensive plan with $500 deductible and 80/20 co-insurance.
Even with a comprehensive plan, the out-of-pocket amounts aren’t small. But compare them to owing the full bill – and the value becomes very clear.
I’ve covered actual US healthcare costs in our article on why US healthcare can be financially devastating without coverage. Worth reading alongside this one.
So Why Would Anyone Choose a Fixed Plan?
Fair question.
Fixed plans are cheaper. Sometimes significantly so.
For a healthy parent in their early 50s visiting for 3-4 weeks, the risk of a major medical event is relatively low. A fixed plan with decent per-event limits might offer enough protection at a lower cost.
Fixed plans are also simpler to buy and understand. For short trips where the primary concern is “just in case,” some families find them acceptable.
But for parents above 60, for longer visits, or for parents with any existing health conditions – the coverage gap is too wide.
The savings on premium are not worth the exposure.
Which One Is Right for Your Parents?
Here’s how I’d think about it.
Go with a comprehensive plan if:
Your parents are above 60
They have any existing conditions – diabetes, blood pressure, heart issues, thyroid, joint problems
The visit is longer than 4-6 weeks
You want genuine peace of mind, not just a checkbox
A fixed plan might be acceptable if:
Your parents are below 55 and in good health
The trip is short – 2 to 3 weeks
Budget is genuinely very tight and the alternative is no coverage at all
Even in the last case – I’d suggest a comprehensive plan with a higher deductible to bring down the cost, rather than a fixed plan. A $1,000 or $2,500 deductible on a comprehensive plan still gives far better protection in a serious emergency.
You can compare both plan types for your parents’ specific age and health profile and see the actual cost difference. It’s often smaller than people expect.
The Pre-Existing Condition Factor
This is where fixed plans fall short most often.
Most fixed plans either exclude pre-existing conditions entirely, or pay a very limited fixed amount for emergencies related to a known condition.
Comprehensive plans – particularly the better ones – offer “acute onset of pre-existing condition” coverage. If your diabetic father has a sudden serious episode, or your mother with hypertension has an emergency, the plan covers it like any other emergency – subject to the deductible and co-insurance.
For parents with any known health conditions, this clause alone justifies choosing a comprehensive plan.
Visitor insurance vs travel insurance – what’s the difference
How the claims process works, step by step
Is visitor insurance mandatory for USA visitors?
Your parents are making a long trip to be with you. Make sure they’re properly covered while they’re there.
If you want to talk through your specific situation or hear from other NRIs who’ve navigated this, join our WhatsApp community at /groups – 20,000+ NRIs helping each other with real experience. Free and volunteer-run.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute insurance or financial advice. Coverage terms, pricing, and eligibility vary by insurer and plan. Always read your policy documents carefully and consult a licensed insurance advisor before purchasing.
Mani Karthik is an entrepreneur who moved back to India in 2016 after nearly a decade living and working in the US and the Middle East. He started BackToIndia to help other NRIs navigate the move — banking, taxes, schooling, careers and the everyday reality of resettling in India.
Rules for NRI banking, tax and residency change often. We update guides when policy or our lived experience changes. Nothing here is legal, tax or investment advice — always confirm with a qualified professional in India.
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