# Wedding & Honeymoon Cancellation Insurance: How Event Policies Differ From Trip Insurance

> A wedding policy and a honeymoon trip policy are not interchangeable, and buying only one leaves a costly gap. Here is exactly what each covers, and why most couples need both.

*Published 2026-07-03 · By Daniel Okafor, ACC/CTC*

Wedding cancellation insurance and honeymoon trip insurance are frequently confused, and the confusion is expensive. A couple who buys only a wedding event policy will discover, typically at the worst possible moment, that their flights, hotel, and honeymoon tour bookings carry zero protection under it. The reverse is equally true: a trip insurance policy bought for the honeymoon offers no protection against a photographer's no-show, a venue bankruptcy, or a caterer who fails to appear on the wedding day itself. These are two different products for two different events, and most couples spending real money on both need both. Here is how they differ, what each covers, and how to fit them together.

## What wedding cancellation insurance covers

Event-specific wedding insurance reimburses non-refundable ceremony and reception costs when a cancellation or postponement is forced by circumstances outside the couple's control. Covered triggers commonly include vendor bankruptcy or sudden closure; extreme weather such as hurricanes, tropical storms, and major snowstorms (routine summer thunderstorms are specifically excluded); military deployment or withdrawn leave; illness of the couple or an immediate family member (pre-existing conditions typically excluded); lost or stolen wedding gifts up to a sublimit; damaged wedding attire; and photo or video loss caused by equipment failure rather than photographer error. According to [Travelers](https://protectmywedding.com/), 55 percent of wedding-insurance claims paid in 2025 were for vendor failures such as shuttered venues and no-show photographers, followed by illness or injury at 16 percent and extreme weather at 10 percent, a reminder that the most common claim is a vendor letting you down, not a natural disaster.

Most event policies also offer a separate liability component, often including host-liquor liability, which many venues contractually require couples to carry. That liability piece protects against third-party injury or property damage at the event and is distinct from the cancellation coverage that reimburses your own deposits.

## The three mainstream event providers

[Markel](https://www.markel.com/us/personal-insurance/wedding) is one of the two dominant event underwriters in the US market. Liability coverage starts at $75 and cancellation coverage at $130, with a 15 percent bundling discount in most states. Notably for destination weddings, Markel's cancellation coverage extends to weddings in the US, Canada, the UK, Mexico, Bermuda, the Bahamas, and most of the Caribbean, though the policy must be purchased at least 15 days before the event and honeymoon travel is not covered under it.

The **Travelers** Wedding Protector Plan, offered through protectmywedding.com, covers cancellation up to $250,000, among the highest limits in the event-specific market, and is available nationwide except in Alaska, Hawaii, and Louisiana. A distinctive feature is photo-and-video protection that can fund reassembling the wedding party for a reshoot if the originals are lost or damaged. **Aon WedSafe** rounds out the mainstream trio: administered by the broker Aon, it offers cancellation/postponement coverage and event liability including host-liquor liability, and sits alongside Markel and Travelers as a standard comparison point. All three are built around the wedding day, not the trip that follows.

The two-policy rule: a wedding cancellation and liability policy (Markel, Travelers, or Aon WedSafe) protects the ceremony; a comprehensive travel policy protects the honeymoon. Buy the wedding policy as soon as deposits are placed, and the trip policy within 14 to 21 days of the first honeymoon booking to secure pre-existing condition waivers and CFAR eligibility.

## Where the honeymoon fits, and where it doesn't

Some wedding cancellation policies do reach the honeymoon, but only through a narrow door. Products such as eWed Insurance (a no-deductible structure with cancellation limits from $5,000 to $100,000) and USLI's Wedding Plus explicitly list non-refundable honeymoon expenses as reimbursable, per [Woman Getting Married's](https://www.womangettingmarried.com/best-wedding-insurance-policies/) 2026 review. The essential caveat is that this coverage is tied to the wedding-cancellation trigger: it applies only when the wedding itself is canceled for a covered reason. If the honeymoon is disrupted by a cause independent of the wedding, a flight delay, a medical emergency abroad, or lost luggage, those losses fall entirely outside the wedding policy and require separate comprehensive travel insurance.

That is why the honeymoon needs its own policy. A comprehensive travel plan covers trip cancellation and interruption, emergency medical care abroad, medical evacuation, and lost baggage, none of which a wedding policy touches. For couples who want the freedom to cancel the trip for essentially any reason, a Cancel For Any Reason (CFAR) upgrade reimburses a partial amount, usually 75 percent, provided you insure 100 percent of non-refundable costs, buy within the carrier's window, and cancel at least 48 to 72 hours before departure; note that CFAR is unavailable to New York and Washington state residents. For change-of-heart protection on the wedding side, only a specialized rider such as Wedsure's (underwritten by Allianz) applies, since standard event policies exclude it.

## The practical framework and cost

Couples spending $30,000 to $100,000 on a wedding and $10,000 to $20,000 on a honeymoon should carry two distinct policies: a wedding cancellation plus liability policy, and a comprehensive travel policy, ideally with CFAR, for the trip. The combined premium runs roughly $400 to $700 for a mid-size wedding and a luxury honeymoon, a small fraction of the non-refundable exposure at risk. Timing matters as much as selection: purchase the wedding policy as soon as you place deposits rather than waiting until 15 days before the event, and buy the trip policy within 14 to 21 days of the first honeymoon booking to lock in pre-existing condition waivers and CFAR eligibility. Read each policy for its specific covered triggers, exclusions, sublimits, and deductibles. Do this once, early, and you convert two of the largest non-refundable purchases of your life into a manageable, insured risk.

## Sources

1. [Wedding Insurance](https://www.markel.com/us/personal-insurance/wedding)
2. [Wedding Insurance by Travelers from Wedding Protector Plan](https://protectmywedding.com/)
3. [WedSafe Wedding Insurance](https://www.wedsafe.com/)
4. [Best Wedding Insurance Policies of 2026](https://www.womangettingmarried.com/best-wedding-insurance-policies/)

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Source: https://eraaway.com/travel-smart/wedding-and-honeymoon-cancellation-insurance
Index: https://eraaway.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://eraaway.com/llms-full.txt
