If you really look hard enough, you might find that there is insurance for just about everything. Even the most random and seldom heard of risks have managed to find an insurance market that provides coverage. While demand for these products may not be as significant as it is for more mainstream coverage like auto or commercial insurance, they were created in response to what was seen as a need in the marketplace.

Below is a compilation of three such “peculiar” products — or those out of the everyday norm for the insurance world — found in the MyNewMarkets.com and Insurance Journal databases. Products like these also highlight something most outside the industry may disagree with — insurance is anything but boring.

3.) Space Tourism

Just exploring everything planet earth has to offer is apparently not good enough for some tourists. Hence the invention of “space tourism,” where private citizens can pay a hefty price to be blasted off into space for a sub-orbital adventure.

One of the most newsworthy space tourism companies so far has been Virgin Galactic, the brainchild of billionaire Richard Branson, which offers a seat to space starting at $250,000 and the ability to book the flight through their website.

These out-of-this-world experiences are not without risk, say those in the insurance industry. In June, Ironshore’s Pembroke Managing Agency, through its Lloyd’s Syndicate 4000, introduced coverage for personal risk exposure of death, serious injury and associated medical expenses for those taking space flights. Limits of up to $5 million are available for one passenger and up to $20 million for one space flight event.

Aon Risk Solutions also offers space tourism coverage through a partnership with Space Expedition Corp., a Netherlands-based tourism company that offers space travel to private citizens. The policy covers losses related to flight cancellation, postponement or temporary interruption. The coverage is based on a regular non-appearance cancellation policy and includes additional supplemental coverage.

2.) Divorce Insurance

Marriage can be a tricky business and to many it is just that — a business. Celebrity divorces have highlighted the outrageous costs associated with getting divorced, but even the dissolution of a marriage of the average couple can be financially devastating.

U.K.-based ARAG Legal Solutions released two divorce insurance products back in 2011 to help with some of the costs associated with divorce for law firms doing nuptial agreements: Pre-nuptial Legal Solutions and Divorce Legal Solutions. The policies provide legal expenses that start from the date of a marriage or civil partnership and protect the policyholder against legal costs associated with matrimonial breakdown.

Both policies are sold in tandem with nuptial agreements and cover the costs that arise from a legal challenge to the nuptial agreement. The Divorce Legal Solutions coverage extends to include the cost of divorce proceedings and ancillary relief and challenge to a nuptial agreement. The Pre-nuptial Legal Solutions product covers the costs of mediation, as well as the costs of legal proceedings if the policyholder or their spouse cannot reach an agreement through mediation, in the event the nuptial agreement is challenged.

“While some may see the very idea of divorce insurance as unromantic, the realities of modern life and the government’s legal aid and costs reforms will make it harder for ordinary people to access justice before the courts, meaning this is the right time to launch such a product,” ARAG Managing Director Tony Buss said three years ago at the launch of ARAG’s products.

In the United States, where the divorce rate is 50 percent, North Carolina-based SafeGuard Guaranty Corp. is working on re-launching a new version of a policy called “WedLock Divorce Insurance.” The WedLock coverage was originally unveiled in August 2010 and underwritten and sold by a Utah surplus lines insurer, according to information on Safeguard’s website, wedlockdivorceinsurance.com. However, WedLock policies are no longer available and the company is now working on creating an insurance company to underwrite its new product, Marriage Assurance, which will also provide a long term “successful marriage benefit” that offers a financial incentive to policyholders who do not divorce. The company is also looking for underwriting relationships to re-launch the WedLock product outside the United States.

1.) Penis Insurance

Lloyd’s has become infamous for insuring out-there risks and that includes body parts ranging from a supermodel’s legs to a football player’s hair to an actress’s smile. But the insurer took it to a new level this past spring with the backing of a policy for men’s, ahem, personal areas. The policy is offered through Canadian underwear maker, UNDZ, and provides coverage in the event of an accident that results in the “complete removal of penis.”

Buying just three pairs of UNDZ gives men aged 12 to 69 a 12-month policy with coverage of up to $50,000 in the event that their penis becomes detached from their body. Stipulations of the policy include detachment cannot have been done intentionally as a result of surgery, and the male’s genitalia could also not have been removed by a close relative, friend or lover.

Policyholders must notify UNDZ of a potential claim as soon as possible and any delays could lead to the reduction in benefits.

At the time of the new coverage announcement, UNDZ founder Bertrand Dore explained the reasoning for the development of the policy by saying, “A man can get insurance for his car, dog, house, land and life but not for his p—s? Well, I thought that was absurd. UNDZ is making it possible for men all over the world to protect their most important asset.”

Now that’s thinking outside the box-ers.