Dial 112 anywhere in Spain and a public ambulance arrives free of charge. But what arrives, how fast, and where it takes you depends on the region, the vehicle dispatched and whether you have private insurance backing you up. Here is what every expat needs to know.
Get a Health Insurance Quote WhatsApp UsThe Spanish ambulance service is not a single national fleet. It is a patchwork of regional emergency medical services dispatched through two phone numbers — the pan-European 112 and the medical-only 061 — staffed by doctors, nurses and técnicos de emergencias sanitarias. Each region runs its own brand: SUMMA 112 in Madrid, SEM in Catalonia, EPES 061 in Andalucia, CECOES 1-1-2 in the Canaries, and the municipal SAMUR-Proteccion Civil on the streets of Madrid itself.
What surprises most expats is that public ambulances are completely free at the point of use, including the doctor on board and the transfer to hospital, regardless of nationality, visa status or whether you have ever paid into the system. The constitutional duty of emergency care covers the ride as well as the A&E visit at the other end.
Private ambulances exist too, dispatched through the 24/7 medical lines of insurers like Sanitas and Caser. They are typically used for non-emergency transfers, repatriation between hospitals, and elective hospital admissions — but in a true cardiac or trauma emergency, the public ambulance is almost always faster and better equipped.
From the difference between 112 and 061 to the kit on board a UVI movil, here is everything you need to make the right call when minutes matter.
The pan-European 112 service versus medical-only 061 used in Andalucia, Galicia and other regions. When each one matters.
SUMMA 112 (Madrid), SAMUR-PC (Madrid municipal), SEM (Catalonia), CECOES (Canaries), EPES 061 (Andalucia).
SVB basico, SVA avanzado, UVI movil and helicopter ambulance — what kit each one carries and when it is dispatched.
Public ambulances are free for everyone. Private ambulances via insurers like Sanitas and Caser handle non-emergency transfers and repatriation.
When to wait for an ambulance, when to drive (and when never to), and the symptoms that mean "do not move — call 112 now."
How the 112 call is triaged, the English-language option in every region, and what the operator needs to know to dispatch correctly.
Both numbers connect to the regional health emergency centre, but they take slightly different routes. Knowing which is which saves seconds — and in cardiac arrest, seconds are muscle.
Like the rest of Spanish healthcare, emergency medical services are devolved to the 17 autonomous regions. Each has its own brand, fleet and uniforms — but all are reached through 112 and all are free in an emergency.
The vehicle dispatched depends on the clinical triage on the phone. Knowing what each one carries helps you understand what is happening when it arrives.
In a genuine emergency the answer is always 112. But private ambulance services have a real role for planned and non-urgent transfers — and your insurer's 24/7 medical line is often the right first call.
Spanish A&E waiting times are real, and the temptation to drive is strong. But for certain symptoms, the ambulance is faster than any car — because treatment starts on board.
The 112 operator asks the same five questions in the same order in every region. Knowing them in advance saves precious seconds — and gives the dispatcher the information needed to send the right vehicle.
Wisdom collected from expat clients who have called 112 in Spain — some of it the hard way.
These are the patterns we see again and again from clients new to Spain.
The right health policy means a 24/7 medical advice line in English, fast access to private follow-up care after a public ambulance ride, and a broker on your side if any bill ever lands wrongly. Here is why expats choose us.
We are a fully registered Spanish insurance brokerage under the DGSFP — the same regulator overseeing every legal insurer in Spain.
Every conversation, every policy document and every claim is handled in clear English by a real human, not a chatbot.
Weekend emergency, late-night travel scare or stranded abroad? Our team is reachable seven days a week, including bank holidays.
We place cover with Sanitas and Caser — two of Spain's most established insurers, both offering 24/7 medical lines, large private hospital networks and international assistance.
Health policies that meet NLV, Digital Nomad and student visa requirements with full hospitalisation and no copays.
If an ambulance or hospital bill ever needs challenging, we deal with the insurer in Spanish on your behalf — one of the biggest reasons clients stay with us for years.
The most common questions our clients ask us about Spanish ambulances and emergency response.
From local health policies that include 24/7 medical advice lines to travel cover for trips home and beyond, make sure you and your family are protected when the 112 call ever has to be made.

Private health cover with Sanitas or Caser that meets visa requirements, unlocks fast English-speaking specialists and includes 24/7 medical advice lines.

Single-trip and annual travel cover for trips home and around Europe, with full medical, emergency repatriation and air ambulance protection.
More step-by-step guides to help you navigate Spanish healthcare and daily life with confidence.
How the triage colour system works at Spanish A&E, what to bring, and who can accompany you.
Which number to dial, what to say, and how to get an English-speaking operator on the line.
Registering with a Spanish GP, getting your TSI card, and booking same-day urgent appointments.
How to apply, which region issues yours, and what it unlocks across the public health system.
Get a tailored health or travel insurance quote in minutes from our DGSFP-registered, English-speaking team — available 7 days a week.
Get My Health Insurance Quote Contact Us WhatsAppReverse mortgages need a personal consultation. Our specialist team will discuss eligibility, amounts and what suits your situation — in clear English.