top of page
Private Medical Insurance — Explained

What is cancer cover?

Cancer cover is one of the most comprehensive parts of a private medical insurance (PMI) policy. It is designed to fund the diagnosis, treatment, and ongoing management of cancer — not just when you are admitted to hospital, but across the full treatment journey.

​

Where standard inpatient cover focuses on hospital stays, cancer cover goes further. It supports you from the point cancer is first suspected, through diagnosis, active treatment, and in many cases, long-term monitoring and aftercare.

Family in house on sofa.png
IN PLAIN ENGLISH

Cancer cover is there to support you from start to finish — from the first consultation and scans, through to treatment like chemotherapy or surgery, and any ongoing monitoring afterwards — helping you access private care quickly without relying on NHS waiting times.

WHAT IS IT?

Cancer cover at a glance.

If a GP or specialist suspects cancer, your policy can begin supporting you immediately. This often starts with consultations and diagnostic tests such as scans, biopsies, and specialist investigations — many of which may be limited or delayed through standard routes.

Once diagnosed, cancer cover typically funds a wide range of treatments. This can include surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and increasingly, newer treatments such as targeted therapies and immunotherapy. Many policies also provide access to drugs that may not be routinely available on the NHS, depending on the level of cover selected.

​

Importantly, cancer treatment is not always a single event — it is often ongoing. Policies are usually designed to reflect this, covering repeated treatment cycles, follow-up consultations, monitoring scans, and specialist reviews where required.

Unlike other parts of a PMI policy, cancer cover is often included as a core feature rather than an optional add-on, reflecting its importance and the potentially significant cost of treatment.

How it fits into your policy

Cancer cover works alongside both inpatient and outpatient benefits. Some elements — such as surgery — may fall under inpatient care, while consultations, diagnostics, and ongoing treatments often sit within outpatient or specialist cancer pathways.

Many insurers structure cancer cover slightly differently from standard benefits. In some cases, it may not be subject to the same outpatient limits, ensuring that treatment is not restricted once a diagnosis has been confirmed.

This structure is designed to provide continuity of care, rather than treating each stage of cancer treatment as a separate claim.

What's typically included

  • Specialist consultations and referrals

  • Diagnostic tests (MRI, CT, PET scans, biopsies)

  • Cancer treatments (chemotherapy, radiotherapy, surgery)

  • Advanced and eligible drug therapies

  • Follow-up appointments and monitoring

  • Ongoing cancer management where required

bottom of page