Diving abroad with photo equipment: DAN Europe, standard travel insurance or health cover? An honest comparison to choose the right protection.
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Diving abroad without proper insurance is a real risk. Not a question of probability, but of consequences. A decompression accident with hyperbaric treatment can cost 5,000 to 20,000 euros depending on the country. A standard travel policy covers classic emergencies, not the specific pathologies that come from scuba diving. The difference matters.
Most standard travel policies contain an exclusion for "risky sports". Scuba diving often falls into that category. When it is not explicitly excluded, it is limited to laughable depths (often 10 m) or restricted geographies.
In 2019, a student of mine had a decompression accident in Cyprus. Mild, fortunately. Two hyperbaric sessions. His premium credit card insured him for "medical emergencies abroad". The hyperbaric chamber was refused because it was classified as "specialized treatment" and not an emergency. He paid 2,800 euros out of pocket.
This is not an isolated case. It is the standard outcome when you dive without specialist insurance.
DAN (Divers Alert Network) is the world reference for diving insurance. The European branch (DAN Europe) covers primarily:
Diving accidents: decompression illness, gas embolism, barotrauma, near-drowning, pressure-related accidents.
Hyperbaric treatment costs: this is the heart of the contract. A hyperbaric session typically lasts 4 to 8 hours. Costs range from 500 to 5,000 euros depending on the country.
Medical evacuation: repatriation from an island or remote destination to a hospital or suitable hyperbaric facility. On a Maldives liveaboard, this evacuation can be the only viable option.
Hospitalization costs linked to a diving accident.
What DAN Europe does not cover: illnesses unrelated to diving, surface accidents, trip cancellation, baggage, photo equipment.
Plans vary by coverage level and maximum covered depth. Check the plan matching your practice at [daneurope.org](/blog/DAN Europe biomonitoring and the intelligent dive computer also explains their research services that members contribute to.
I am not saying travel insurance is useless. It covers real risks that DAN does not:
Trip cancellation. If you have booked a 2,000 euro photo diving trip and a personal emergency prevents you from going, travel insurance reimburses. DAN does not.
Lost or stolen baggage. Your hold bag with wetsuit and fins disappears in Dubai in transit. Travel insurance steps in.
General medical emergencies abroad. Food poisoning, a fracture, appendicitis on the road: your travel policy covers these.
The problem is that travel insurance and DAN are not interchangeable. They cover different risks. The combination of both is the only complete approach.
This is the most overlooked question. You are traveling with a 1,500 euro camera, a 600 euro lens, an 800 euro housing. What covers this equipment?
DAN Europe: nothing. It is not within their remit.
Standard travel insurance: depends on the policy. Some premium plans cover electronics up to a ceiling (often 500 to 1,500 euros). Check your equipment value against the policy limits.
Home contents insurance with away-from-home extension: some policies cover photo equipment while traveling. Call your insurer before the trip and ask explicitly about underwater photo gear coverage abroad.
Specialist photo equipment insurance: insurers such as Hiscox or photography association schemes offer dedicated equipment coverage. If you have a housing worth over 1,000 euros, this option is worth comparing.
For travel involving significant photo equipment, the article on first photo diving destination: mistakes to avoid covers other logistical watch-points.
After ten years of photo diving trips, here is what I use and what I recommend to my students:
DAN Europe (Plus plan or equivalent): full diving accident cover, worldwide evacuation. This is the non-negotiable baseline.
Travel insurance (premium plan): cancellation, baggage, general emergencies, and equipment up to the policy ceiling.
Home contents check: a call to your insurer to confirm away-from-home coverage for photo equipment.
This combination costs only marginally more than travel insurance alone. The difference between adequate cover and inadequate cover is invisible at purchase. It becomes very visible the day you need to use it.
Disclaimer: I am not an insurance broker. The information in this article is educational and does not replace a careful reading of each policy's general conditions. Prices and coverages change. Verify directly with each insurer before your trip.
The AquaExposure underwater photography course includes a travel logistics module covering the full preparation of a photo diving trip, including insurance and equipment protection.
No. DAN Europe covers diving accidents and associated medical costs (hyperbaric chamber, evacuation, hospitalization). Photo gear requires separate coverage through travel insurance with a gear option, a dedicated photo insurance or a rider on your home contents policy.
Often partially or not at all. Most standard travel policies explicitly exclude underwater sports or cap medical coverage at 10 m depth. Read the exclusion clauses before you leave, not after an accident.
DAN Europe is specialist diving insurance covering decompression illness, gas embolism and hyperbaric chamber costs worldwide. Travel insurance covers trip cancellation, baggage and general medical emergencies but rarely the specific injuries that come from scuba diving.
DAN Europe plans range from around 50 to 150 euros per year depending on coverage level. The Standard plan covers accidents to 30 m, the Plus plan extends further with worldwide evacuation cover. Check current pricing at daneurope.org as rates change annually.
Depends on your policy. Some home contents policies include an away-from-home rider covering electronics and photo gear up to a certain amount. Call your insurer before the trip and ask explicitly whether underwater photo gear is covered abroad.
Call the DAN emergency hotline (even non-members receive guidance). In a last resort, contact your country's embassy. Never try to manage hyperbaric chamber costs alone: a single session can run to several thousand euros.