Comprehensive visitor insurance for parents visiting the USA ranges from $117 to $561 per month, based on 2026 pricing verified across major plan providers.
Fixed benefit plans are cheaper, ranging from $30 to $166 per month – but as I’ve covered in our fixed vs comprehensive plans guide, that lower price often means much weaker protection when something serious happens.
The number that matters most isn’t the premium. It’s whether the plan will actually cover a real emergency.
What Drives the Cost of Visitor Insurance
Before we get into the age-wise numbers, it helps to understand why prices vary so much.
The cost of visitor insurance depends mainly on the age of the parents, the duration of stay, the medical coverage level chosen, the insurance provider, whether pre-existing conditions are covered, and the deductible and co-insurance structure of the plan.
Age is the biggest factor. A 55-year-old and a 72-year-old can be looking at completely different price ranges for the same plan.
Coverage amount is next. A plan with $100,000 maximum costs less than one with $250,000 maximum.
Deductible affects the monthly cost significantly. Policies with higher deductibles and co-insurance tend to have lower premiums, but require more out-of-pocket payment if care is needed.
And pre-existing condition coverage adds to cost – sometimes substantially.
These are approximate monthly premiums for comprehensive plans with $150,000 coverage and a $250 deductible – a reasonable mid-range setup for most visiting parents.
Parent Age
Approximate Monthly Premium
Notes
50-55
$80 – $120
Most plans fully available, broad coverage
56-60
$100 – $150
Pre-existing acute onset broadly available
61-65
$130 – $200
Good coverage window, most plans apply
66-70
$160 – $250
Premium rises; check pre-existing limits by age
71-75
$200 – $350
Some plan restrictions begin above 70
76-80
$280 – $450
Fewer comprehensive options; Safe Travels/Atlas still apply
81-89
$400 – $561+
Limited options; Safe Travels USA Comprehensive covers up to 89
A few things to keep in mind about these numbers.
These are monthly estimates based on publicly available 2026 pricing from major plan providers. Actual quotes vary by plan, insurer, state of residence, and specific health disclosures.
Always get a real quote before assuming a price.
Our recommendation tool gives you actual plan-level quotes in minutes based on your parents’ exact details.
Breaking It Down by Common Visit Lengths
Here’s how the total cost looks for a typical visit duration, using mid-range estimates for a parent in their mid-60s on a comprehensive plan.
Visit Duration
Estimated Total Cost (Age 62-65)
Estimated Total Cost (Age 66-70)
4 weeks (1 month)
$140 – $200
$180 – $260
6 weeks
$210 – $300
$270 – $390
3 months
$420 – $600
$540 – $780
6 months
$840 – $1,200
$1,080 – $1,560
That three-month window – which is the most common visit length in our NRI community – typically costs $420 to $780 for a parent in their 60s on a comprehensive plan.
Put next to a single ER visit that can cost $8,000 to $15,000 in the US, that number looks very different.
What Changes When Pre-Existing Conditions Are Involved
If your parents have diabetes, hypertension, a cardiac history, or any managed condition, two things happen to the price.
First, you’ll want a plan that covers acute onset of pre-existing conditions – which rules out the cheapest options.
Second, if you want full pre-existing condition coverage (not just acute onset), the cost rises significantly.
For a 60-year-old traveler, plans with acute onset coverage start from around $39/month and go up to $229/month depending on coverage limits and deductible. Full pre-existing condition coverage plans start from around $384 for 3 months for the same age group.
That’s the honest pricing picture.
Acute onset coverage – which covers sudden emergencies related to a known condition – is available at reasonable cost on plans like Patriot America Plus, Atlas America, and Safe Travels USA Comprehensive.
Full pre-existing coverage – covering ongoing treatment of chronic conditions – is available from plans like INF Elite Plus X and INF Premier X, but at a higher price and usually with a 90-day minimum purchase.
Fixed vs Comprehensive: The Price Difference in Real Terms
Let me make this concrete.
A fixed benefit plan for a 65-year-old parent might cost $50-$70/month. A comprehensive plan for the same parent might cost $160-$220/month.
The monthly difference: roughly $100-$150.
For a 3-month visit, that’s an extra $300-$450 for comprehensive coverage.
And if your parent is hospitalized for even 2 days in the US – which can cost $20,000 to $40,000 – the fixed plan might pay $3,000 while the comprehensive plan covers most of the actual bill.
That extra $400 in premium is not even worth comparing to a potential $30,000 exposure gap.
How to Reduce the Premium Without Reducing Protection
A few things that genuinely bring down the cost without compromising meaningful coverage.
Increase your deductible.
Moving from a $250 deductible to a $500 or $1,000 deductible can reduce the monthly premium by 10-20%. The deductible is what you pay first if something happens – it’s a manageable out-of-pocket cost, unlike a $50,000 hospital bill.
Right-size the coverage amount.
For a healthy parent in their early 60s visiting for 6 weeks, a $100,000 comprehensive plan is adequate and costs less than a $250,000 plan. If your parents are older or have conditions, don’t cut here – but for genuinely healthy younger parents on short visits, $100,000 is a reasonable floor.
Buy for the exact duration.
Don’t over-purchase. If your parents are visiting for 10 weeks, buy for 10 weeks – not 6 months. Most plans can be extended before expiry if the stay gets extended.
Compare plans, not just headlines.
Premium alone tells you nothing. Two plans at the same price can have dramatically different coverage structures. Compare actual plan details rather than just sorting by price.
A Practical Example: Suresh’s Parents
Suresh in our community was budgeting for his parents’ 3-month visit. His father is 67, has managed hypertension. His mother is 64, healthy.
For his father (67, hypertension): Comprehensive plan with $150,000 coverage, $500 deductible, acute onset pre-existing condition coverage – approximately $190-$230/month.
For his mother (64, healthy): Comprehensive plan with $150,000 coverage, $500 deductible – approximately $140-$170/month.
Combined 3-month cost: roughly $990 to $1,200 for both parents.
That’s less than one day in a US hospital for either of them.
Suresh bought the plans. His father had a minor cardiac scare in week 7 – nothing serious, but required an ER visit and a one-night stay. The bill: $22,000. His insurance covered $20,800 after the deductible.
The premium for the entire 3-month trip was less than what the ER visit alone would have cost uninsured.
What About Parents Already in the US?
This comes up often.
Yes – most plans can be purchased after your parents have already arrived in the US.
However, there are usually time restrictions. Patriot America Plus must be purchased within 30 days of arrival for travelers above 65. Other plans have their own eligibility windows.
If your parents are already there and don’t have coverage, buy something today rather than waiting. Even partial coverage is far better than none.
The Number to Remember
For most NRI families bringing parents to the US, a solid comprehensive visitor insurance plan costs $130 to $280 per month depending on age.
For a 2-3 month visit, you’re looking at $300 to $800 total for one parent.
That number sounds like a lot until you read about the real cost of US healthcare emergencies.
Then it sounds like the most reasonable money you’ll ever spend.
Get a real quote for your parents – enter their age, health conditions, and travel dates. It takes about 10 minutes and removes all the guesswork.
If you want to hear from other NRIs about what they actually paid and what their experience was like, join our WhatsApp community at /groups – 20,000+ NRIs helping each other daily. Free and volunteer-run.
Disclaimer: Premium estimates in this article are based on publicly available 2026 pricing data from major visitor insurance providers and are approximate. Actual premiums vary by plan, insurer, state of residence, health disclosures, and other factors. Always get a direct quote and read the full policy document before purchasing. This article does not constitute insurance advice.
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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