We tested and researched the major players. If you only read three lines:
We've been on working holidays in New Zealand and Australia ourselves. We've also been the friend frantically googling "does my insurance cover X" from a hostel bathroom. Our criteria:
We did not include providers without a verifiable claims process, single-country specialists with poor flexibility, or anyone who couldn't tell us in writing whether they cover manual labour.
This is the part most travellers get wrong. Standard travel insurance is designed for two-week holidays — yours is not a two-week holiday. The four things that bite people on WHVs:
1. Length of stay Most standard policies cap at 90 days. You need a policy that explicitly covers 6, 12, or 24 months — or a subscription model with no max duration.
2. Manual labour Fruit picking, farm work, hospitality, ski resort jobs — these are how most people earn money in Australia. Many policies exclude "manual labour" by default. Read the PDS (Product Disclosure Statement) for the words "manual work" and check whether it's covered, excluded, or requires an add-on.
3. Adventure activities Surfing, snorkelling, hiking the Overland Track, scuba in the Great Barrier Reef, bungee jumping — all of these are why you're going. Make sure they're covered without an extra premium that doubles your cost.
4. Australia's healthcare reality The Reciprocal Health Care Agreement (RHCA) covers UK, Irish, New Zealand, Belgian, Finnish, Italian, Maltese, Dutch, Norwegian, Slovenian, and Swedish citizens for "medically essential" care via Medicare. It does not cover ambulances (which can cost AUD $1,500+), most dental, repatriation, or many specialist services. RHCA is a partial safety net, not a replacement for proper insurance.
If you're not from an RHCA country (Germany, France, Spain, Canada, US, Japan, etc.), you have no public coverage and a broken ankle can cost AUD $5,000+ out of pocket.
Quick verdict: The best choice for most working holidaymakers, especially if you don't know exactly how long you'll be away. The monthly subscription model is genuinely revolutionary for long trips.
How it works: You pay roughly USD $45-58/month (it ticks over every 4 weeks), and you cancel whenever you come home. There's no fixed end date and you can sign up after you've already left your home country — most insurers won't let you do that.
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: Anyone on a 6+ month trip without a fixed return date, anyone who wants to avoid paying upfront for 12 months, anyone signing up mid-trip.
Indicative price: From ~USD $45.08/month for under-40s. Less than half the cost of a standard 12-month policy from a major insurer.
Quick verdict: A backpacker-focused insurer based in the UK that's been the default pick among British and Irish working holidaymakers for over a decade. If you're from these countries, this is the policy we'd compare everything else against.
How it works: Single policy from 2 days to 18 months, with three tiers (Traveller, Traveller Plus, True Adventurer) and add-ons for specific activities, gadgets, and gear.
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: UK or Irish working holidaymakers, especially those doing genuine adventure travel (skiing, diving, mountaineering).
Indicative price: ~£500-700 for a 12-month Traveller Plus policy with adventure pack for a healthy 25-year-old. Less for shorter trips.
Quick verdict: A Spanish insurer that's quietly taken over the European backpacker market over the last few years. Modern app, fast claims, no upfront medical payments. We've seen friends sing its praises after multi-thousand-euro claims went through painlessly.
How it works: Choose Long Stay or Annual Multi-Trip for working holidays, customise medical limits, add adventure or electronics packs. Manage everything through their app, including a 24/7 doctor chat.
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: European working holidaymakers who want a modern claims experience and don't mind a fixed return date.
Indicative price: From ~€500 for a 12-month Long Stay policy, depending on country of residence and add-ons. Often 5% off via affiliate code.
Quick verdict: A German-built SafetyWing competitor with a clean app and EU-friendly billing. Genuinely good option if you're European and want SafetyWing's flexibility but prefer dealing with a European insurer.
How it works: Monthly subscription, no fixed duration, two tiers (Explorer and Native). Native is for stays over 2 years; Explorer is the working holiday tier.
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: European travellers who like the SafetyWing model but want a Europe-based insurer for claims.
Indicative price: From ~€39/month for Explorer tier.
Quick verdict: The famous name in backpacker insurance. Pricier than SafetyWing but with broader activity coverage and a stronger trip cancellation tier. If you're skiing, scuba diving, mountaineering, or doing anything that'd give a normal insurer pause, this is the option.
How it works: Two tiers (Standard and Explorer), fixed-trip pricing, add activities as needed. Available to residents of 100+ countries.
Pros:
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Best for: Adventure-heavy itineraries, anyone who's prepaid significant tours/flights, anyone who needs a globally recognised brand for visa purposes.
Indicative price: ~USD $1,000-1,400 for a 12-month Explorer policy.
Answer these in order:
Q1: Do you have a fixed return date?
Q2: Where are you from?
Q3: Are you doing serious adventure stuff (skiing, scuba, mountaineering)?
That's it. Don't overthink it. Insurance you don't buy is the worst option; insurance with the wrong policy is the second-worst; everything else is acceptable.
Is travel insurance required for an Australian Working Holiday Visa?
Travel insurance is not a legal requirement for the Australian Working Holiday Visa (subclass 417 or 462) but the Department of Home Affairs strongly recommends it. The cost of medical treatment in Australia without insurance can easily exceed AUD $10,000 for serious incidents. We consider it non-negotiable.
Does the Reciprocal Health Care Agreement (RHCA) replace travel insurance?
No. The RHCA covers UK, Irish, NZ, Belgian, Finnish, Italian, Maltese, Dutch, Norwegian, Slovenian, and Swedish citizens for "medically essential" care via Medicare. It does not cover ambulances, dental, repatriation, lost luggage, trip cancellation, or non-emergency care. Treat it as a partial safety net, not a substitute for proper insurance.
Does working holiday insurance cover manual labour?
It depends on the policy. Fruit picking, hospitality, and ski resort work are usually covered by backpacker-specific insurers like True Traveller. Construction, mining, professional cooking with heavy machinery, and other heavy industrial work are usually excluded. Always check the PDS for "manual work" exclusions before buying.
Can I buy insurance after I've already left home?
Yes, with SafetyWing, Genki, and World Nomads. Most traditional insurers require you to buy before departing. This is a key reason long-term travellers prefer subscription-based models.
How much should I budget for working holiday insurance in Australia?
Realistic ranges: €500-700 for a one-off 12-month policy from a traditional insurer (True Traveller, Heymondo, World Nomads). USD $540-700 over 12 months for a subscription model (SafetyWing, Genki). Adventure add-ons typically add 10-20%.
What's the difference between Working Holiday insurance and regular travel insurance?
Working holiday insurance covers longer durations (6-24 months), manual labour, and the kind of mid-trip adjustments (visa extensions, changing plans) that working holidaymakers make. Standard travel insurance is designed for short trips and excludes most of these.
Can I get insurance if I'm over 30?
Yes — most working holiday insurers cover up to 65+ years, despite the WHV age limits. SafetyWing prices increase modestly after 40. Some country-pairs allow WHVs up to 35 (e.g., Italian or Danish citizens to Australia, UK or Canadian citizens to New Zealand).
We're Seb and Matt, the two-person team behind Working Holiday Guide. We met on a working holiday in New Zealand in 2024, and we've been on, between us, 3 working holiday visas. We've made the insurance mistakes so you don't have to — including one Friday night in Wellington that involved a kitchen knife, a hospital, and a frantic call to True Traveller. Spoiler: they paid out.
Our overall pick is SafetyWing for flexibility, True Traveller for UK/Irish travellers, and World Nomads for adventure-heavy trips. Whatever you pick, get something — and read the PDS for "manual work" and "adventure activities" before you click buy.