The right health policy for any Spanish visa application — NLV, DNV, Student, family or work visa. Consulate-compliant, fast turnaround.
Every Spanish residency visa has its own health insurance requirements. Here are the main ones — and the policies that meet them.
Spain's non-lucrative visa — for retirees and self-funded applicants.
Learn moreHealth insurance for the DNV — Spain's remote-work visa.
Learn moreCover that satisfies consulate requirements for student visa applications.
Learn morePolicies on the lists Spanish consulates routinely accept.
Learn moreIs this page for you?
If you are applying for a long-stay Spanish visa as a non-EU national — or as an EU citizen arranging private healthcare for residency registration in Spain — you almost certainly need a specific type of private health insurance. Here are the people we help most.
Post-Brexit, British nationals cannot use an EHIC or rely on the NHS. The Non-Lucrative Visa requires private health insurance with no copayments and full Spain-wide cover. We help hundreds of UK applicants every year.
Spain's DNV has its own health insurance requirements. If you work remotely for a non-Spanish employer and want to live in Spain legally, we can arrange the right policy for your DNV application quickly.
Students applying for study visas, people regularising their stay through Arraigo, and those bringing family members to Spain under Reagrupación Familiar all need appropriate health cover. We handle all visa types.
What you need to understand
Visa health insurance for Spain is not the same as travel insurance, not the same as your home country's national health entitlement, and not always the same as the private health insurance you might already hold. It is a specific type of policy — issued by a Spanish-regulated insurer — that meets the criteria laid down by the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs for long-stay residency visa applications.
At its core, the requirement exists because Spain wants to ensure that foreign nationals living there long-term will not rely on the Spanish public health system (Sistema Nacional de Salud). By holding comprehensive private cover, you demonstrate financial self-sufficiency in terms of healthcare — which is one of the central pillars of long-stay visa eligibility.
The three non-negotiable elements that consulates consistently look for are: no copayments at point of use, no waiting periods that would leave you unprotected during the initial policy period, and coverage that extends across the whole of Spain rather than a single region or only emergency care. Beyond these core requirements, the policy must be issued by an insurer that is registered with the DGSFP — the Spanish insurance regulator — because foreign policies, even comprehensive ones, do not satisfy this condition.
What this means in practice is that your GHIC (Global Health Insurance Card) will not be accepted. Your existing private health insurance policy from a UK, US, or Canadian provider will almost certainly not be accepted either, even if it provides excellent cover. The insurer must be Spanish-regulated, and the certificate must be in the correct format to be submitted with your application documents.
A copayment (copago in Spanish) is a fixed contribution you pay each time you use a medical service — for example, €5 per GP visit or €10 per specialist appointment. For standard private health insurance in Spain, copayments are common and keep premiums lower. For visa purposes, however, copayments are typically not permitted. The consulate wants to see that you have full access to healthcare without financial barriers at the point of use. We only arrange visa policies that carry no copayments.
Many health insurance policies come with waiting periods — a period at the start of the policy during which certain conditions or treatments are not covered. For visa insurance, most consulates expect the policy to be active from day one with either no waiting periods or explicitly stated and very limited exceptions. A policy that has a six-month waiting period for, say, specialist consultations would typically not be accepted. We will ensure your policy matches the requirements for your specific visa.
Your policy must cover you across all of Spain — not just the region where you plan to live, and not just for emergencies. Comprehensive, nationwide cover is the standard. This also means accident and emergency care, specialist consultations, diagnostic tests, hospitalisation, and typically dental emergencies at minimum. Some visa types may require additional elements of cover, which we will discuss with you when arranging your policy.
Your visa, your requirements
Different Spanish visas have different nuances in their health insurance requirements. Below is a guide to the main visa types we cover. Click through to the dedicated page for your visa for full details.
| Visa Type | Cover Required | Key Requirements | Time to Certificate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Lucrative Visa (NLV) | Comprehensive, Spain-wide | No copayments, no waiting periods, DGSFP-registered insurer | 1–3 working days |
| Digital Nomad Visa (DNV) | Comprehensive, Spain-wide | No copayments, meets DNV criteria, sometimes additional requirements | 1–3 working days |
| Student Visa | Comprehensive, Spain-wide | No copayments, covers duration of studies, DGSFP-registered | 1–3 working days |
| Arraigo Social / Laboral | Comprehensive, Spain-wide | Varies — often required alongside other documentation | 1–3 working days |
| Family Reunification (Reagrupación Familiar) | Spain-wide for each family member | Separate policies may be needed per applicant; no copayments | 1–3 working days |
The most common route for British, American and Canadian nationals retiring to or living in Spain without working. Full compliance details, policy options, and certificate information.
Learn more about NLV health insurance →Spain's DNV is popular with remote workers. The health insurance requirements overlap with the NLV but have specific nuances. We explain them clearly and arrange the right policy.
Learn more about DNV health insurance →International students studying in Spain need a compliant policy for their student visa application. We arrange affordable, compliant cover specifically for student applicants.
Learn more about student visa health insurance →Why choose 247 Expat Insurance
Arranging visa health insurance is not complicated when you know what you are doing — but it can feel overwhelming when you are new to the Spanish system, dealing with unfamiliar insurers, and working against a visa application deadline. That is exactly the situation we exist to resolve.
We are a specialist expat insurance agent regulated in Spain and operating in English, seven days a week. Our team understands the health insurance requirements for Spanish visa applications because we handle them every day — for British applicants going through the London consulate and BLS International, for American applicants applying through consulates in New York, Los Angeles, Miami and elsewhere, for Canadian and Irish and Dutch applicants across Europe and beyond.
When you contact us, we will ask you a small number of questions: which visa you are applying for, which consulate you are using, when you plan to submit your application, and some basic health and personal details. From there, we will identify the policies that best match your requirements and your budget, explain the differences clearly, and once you choose, we handle everything else — including chasing the certificate so you have it in time for your appointment.
We also help with renewals. Your NLV or DNV will need renewing after one year (and then typically for a further two), and your health insurance needs to be in place at each renewal point. Many of our clients come back to us year after year because we make it straightforward.
The bigger picture
For many expats, the health insurance requirement for their Spanish visa is the first time they realise that the Spanish private health insurance market works very differently from what they are used to at home. In the UK, most people have relied on the NHS their entire lives. In the US, people are used to employer-sponsored plans with copayments as standard. In Canada, provincial health coverage has been the norm.
Spain's private health insurance market — particularly at the visa-compliant end — is actually very good value and often surprisingly comprehensive. The major Spanish insurers have extensive networks of private hospitals and clinics across the country. Many expats who start with a visa policy and experience the Spanish private health system end up continuing their cover enthusiastically long after it is strictly required. The combination of good access, no waiting rooms, and no copayments makes it genuinely practical healthcare.
Understanding this context helps explain why the visa requirement is not simply a bureaucratic hurdle — it is also, for most expats, the gateway to a healthcare arrangement that will serve them well throughout their life in Spain.
Spain has an excellent network of private hospitals and clinics. Your visa policy gives you access from day one, without queue times.
We explain Spanish insurance in English — including policy wording, certificate content and renewal requirements. No confusion, no guesswork.
The certificate we arrange is formatted correctly for consulate submission. We know what is required and ensure your paperwork is right.
We support you through your visa renewal too — making sure your cover is continuous and compliant at every stage of your residency.
What our clients say
We were completely lost trying to understand what the consulate needed for our NLV applications. The 247 Expat team explained everything in plain English, sorted our policies within a day, and had our certificates ready well before our BLS appointment. Couldn't have been easier.
— Sarah & David M.
NLV applicants, applied through BLS London · Now living in Alicante
I was applying for the Digital Nomad Visa and had read so much conflicting information online about what insurance was actually needed. One conversation with 247 Expat cleared everything up. They knew exactly which policies work and got me a certificate in two days.
— James R.
Digital Nomad Visa applicant · Now based in Barcelona
Avoid these errors
These are the most frequent reasons visa health insurance applications hit problems. Knowing them in advance will save you time, money, and stress.
Perhaps the single most common mistake. Applicants purchase a policy — sometimes a well-known international plan — and then discover at their consulate appointment that it is not accepted. The policy must be issued by a DGSFP-regulated insurer. Check this before you buy anything.
Many good private health insurance policies in Spain include small copayments — they are normal and keep premiums affordable. But for visa purposes, copayments are not acceptable. Always confirm your policy is copayment-free before using it for a visa application.
Some policies that appear compliant include waiting periods hidden in the fine print. A policy with a three-month waiting period for specialist consultations is unlikely to satisfy consulate requirements. Read your policy schedule carefully or — better still — let us arrange it for you.
Certificates do not appear instantly. If you book a BLS appointment or consulate slot and then try to arrange insurance the day before, you may find yourself without the certificate you need. Allow at least a week — ideally more — and contact us as soon as your appointment is confirmed.
Your visa will need renewing, and your health insurance must be in place at each renewal point. Lapses in cover can cause complications with your renewal application. We track renewal dates for our clients and remind them when it is time to act.
Frequently asked questions
Everything you need to know before you arrange your visa health insurance policy.
Visa health insurance for Spain is a private health insurance policy that meets the requirements set by the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs for long-stay visa applications. It must be issued by a Spanish-regulated insurer, cover the full territory of Spain, have no copayments and no significant waiting periods. The certificate issued by the insurer is submitted as part of your visa application.
In most cases, no. The Spanish consulate typically requires a policy from a DGSFP-regulated insurer. EU health cards (EHIC/GHIC), NHS entitlements, and many private foreign policies do not meet the requirements because they are not issued by a Spanish-regulated insurer and do not provide the correct level of comprehensive cover. We can clarify your specific situation when you contact us.
Yes. Most Spanish consulates require that the policy has no copayments — meaning you pay nothing at point of use. Policies that include copayments (co-pago) are generally not accepted for visa applications, though specific requirements can vary slightly by consulate. We only arrange policies that meet the no-copayment standard for visa purposes.
Once your application is confirmed and the policy is in place, most insurers issue the certificate within one to three working days. In urgent cases, same-day or next-day issuance may be possible depending on the insurer. Contact our team as soon as you know your consulate appointment date so we can ensure your certificate is ready in time.
Health insurance is required for several Spanish visa types, including the Non-Lucrative Visa (NLV), the Digital Nomad Visa (DNV), Student Visas, Arraigo applications, and Family Reunification (Reagrupación Familiar) visas. Each visa type may have slightly different requirements, so it is important to get cover that matches your specific situation. We cover all visa types.
The certificate must typically state the policyholder's full name and date of birth, the policy start and end dates (covering at least the initial visa period), that the policy has no copayments, that coverage is across all of Spain, the name and registration details of the insurer, and confirmation of the scope of cover. Some consulates require specific wording. We ensure the certificates we arrange contain the standard required information.
If a health insurance policy is flagged during a visa application, the consulate will typically request additional documentation or ask you to replace the policy. We work hard to ensure the policies we arrange meet the standard criteria, and our team is available to assist if any clarification is needed. We cannot guarantee acceptance — no agent or insurer can — but we use policies with a strong track record with Spanish consulates.
You need the health insurance policy in place before you submit your visa application — the certificate is a required document at the point of application submission. The policy can typically start from your planned entry date into Spain, but the certificate must be available when you submit your documents. Plan accordingly and contact us well ahead of your appointment.
Speak to our English-speaking team today — we will identify the right policy for your visa type, issue your certificate fast, and take the guesswork out of the process. Available seven days a week.
Related pages

Visa Health Insurance
Everything you need to know about health insurance for Spain's Non-Lucrative Visa — the most popular route for British, American and Canadian expats.
Read more →
Visa Health Insurance
Arranging compliant health insurance for Spain's Digital Nomad Visa. Understand the requirements and get your certificate quickly.
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Consulate Guidance
What Spanish consulates actually check in a health insurance policy — and how to ensure yours meets the criteria for acceptance.
Read more →Detailed guides for applicants in specific countries, by consulate, by submission centre, by visa route, by appointment city and by common problem.
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