Insights on pricing, marketing, hospitality, and the business behind transformational retreats. By Leni Cavazos.

Retreat insurance is the single most commonly overlooked cost line in a retreat business, and the one that can end a business in a single incident. Every retreat needs three coverage layers: general liability, event cancellation, and (for international retreats) travel and medical. This guide walks through each, what they cost, and when to buy.
Retreat insurance is a set of policies that protect the retreat business from financial loss due to guest injury, property damage, cancellation, cancellation of the venue, force majeure, or medical events during the retreat.
Covers bodily injury, property damage, and legal costs if a guest is injured or property is damaged during the retreat.
Typical cost: $400–$1,500 per retreat for a small cohort. Annual policies for established retreat businesses: $1,200–$3,500 per year covering multiple retreats.
Required by: most hospitality-grade venues.
Covers financial loss if the retreat has to be cancelled, weather, venue failure, force majeure, or similar.
Typical cost: 1–5% of total retreat budget depending on coverage.
Required by: no one, but essential for international retreats and high-cost venues.
Covers medical evacuation, emergency medical care, and trip disruption for the retreat leader and team. Should also be strongly recommended to guests as their own purchase.
Typical cost: $50–$200 per traveler for the retreat duration.
Required by: no one, but strongly recommended.

- Intentional bad acts
- Activities excluded by the policy (extreme sports, unlicensed practices)
- Pre-existing medical conditions for guests (unless explicitly covered)
- Guest refusal to follow retreat protocols
- Legal costs outside covered events
1. Ask the venue. Venues often recommend insurers they have worked with.
2. Get three quotes. Coverage and price vary significantly.
3. Read exclusions carefully. The denial is usually in the exclusion section.
4. Confirm liability amount. Minimum $1M general liability for most retreats.
5. Confirm coverage in the retreat jurisdiction. US-based policies sometimes do not cover international incidents.
Yes, and the guest agreement should strongly recommend it. Guests should buy their own travel insurance covering flights, medical, and trip interruption. This is their responsibility and should be clearly communicated in the guest agreement.
Generally no, but most hospitality-grade venues require general liability coverage as a condition of the contract.
Minimum $1M per occurrence, $2M aggregate. Luxury-tier retreats often carry $2M–$5M.
Yes. For retreat businesses running 2+ retreats per year, annual coverage is usually cheaper and simpler.
Almost never. Retreats require specific event or professional liability coverage.
You saved a few hundred dollars. But a single incident without coverage can end the business. The math is not close.
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