Yes — you can buy Spanish private health insurance with a passport before you have an NIE or TIE. This is the normal path for visa applicants who need the policy and certificate to submit at consulate stage. Here’s how it works and what changes after you arrive in Spain.
The NIE (Número de Identidad de Extranjero) is the Spanish foreigner ID number issued after visa approval. The TIE (Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero) is the physical residency card issued some weeks after arrival. Most visa applicants need health insurance BEFORE they have either of these — for the consulate stage of the visa application.
Spanish-licensed insurers understand this. Visa-stage policies are routinely set up using the applicant’s passport, with NIE/TIE added later once issued. The policy itself is fully valid; the certificate issued at this stage works for the consulate.
247 Expat Insurance arranges Spanish health insurance for visa applicants using passport details. Same-day setup, certificate within one business day, NIE updated later when issued.
Yes. Spanish-licensed private health insurance can be purchased using a passport for foreign visa applicants who haven’t yet received their NIE. This is the standard pathway for visa-stage cover.
The reason: NIE is issued after visa approval, but visa applicants need to submit health insurance evidence as part of the application. The chicken-and-egg situation is well understood by Spanish insurers, who routinely set up policies using passport number as the policyholder identifier.
Once the visa is approved and NIE issued, the policy is updated to reference the NIE. The TIE is added later. The policy and certificate work throughout this process.
Yes. For visa applicants, policy setup with passport number only is normal. The Spanish insurer uses the passport as the policyholder identifier; the certificate references passport details; the cover is fully valid for consulate submission. The NIE is added later once issued — the policy continues unchanged, just with the identifier updated from passport to NIE.
The typical setup process:
The NIE is the Spanish foreigner ID number. It’s issued:
In both cases, the NIE comes after visa application acceptance. The visa application itself requires demonstrating private health insurance, so insurance must be in place before NIE is issued. This timeline means most visa applicants are setting up health insurance with passport only.
For passport-based policy setup, Spanish insurers typically need:
The NIE is added later. The TIE is added later still.
Both passport number and NIE serve as policyholder identifiers in Spanish insurance systems. Key points:
The policy itself doesn’t change — only the identifier reference. The cover and policy holder remain the same throughout.
The update process:
The update is typically same-day and free of charge.
The certificate issued before NIE is fully valid for consulate submission. It references:
Consulates accept these certificates as standard. The certificate’s function is to demonstrate that the applicant has compliant cover — whether the policy is identified by passport or NIE doesn’t affect that demonstration. See our certificate guide.
Payment for the policy can typically be made using:
Monthly payment is the trickier path before you have a Spanish bank account. Options:
See our monthly payment guide for more depth.
Practical notes by nationality:
US passports are standard for Spanish insurer setup. US credit cards work for annual payment. Common visa routes: NLV, DNV, Student, Work. NIE typically issued at consulate or after arrival.
UK passports are standard. Annual upfront payment by credit/debit card is supported. Common visa routes: NLV, DNV, Student, Work. Payment options: Spanish or EU IBAN, bank transfer, or credit/debit card.
Canadian passports are standard. Canadian credit cards work. Same visa routes typical. NIE issuance follows the standard route.
US applicant for NLV, hasn’t had visa appointment yet. A typical scenario: passport-based policy setup. Annual upfront on US credit card. Certificate issued for NLV. Submit at consulate. After NLV approval, update with NIE.
UK applicant for DNV, has Spanish bank account already. A typical scenario: passport-based setup; SEPA monthly from Spanish account. Certificate for DNV. After DNV approval, update with NIE; SEPA continues unchanged.
Canadian student visa applicant. A typical scenario: passport-based setup using Canadian credit card for annual. Student visa certificate. After arrival and registration, NIE issued; policy updated.
Australian NLV applicant. A typical scenario: passport-based setup. Annual upfront on Australian credit card. Certificate for NLV. NIE issued at consulate stamp; policy updated.
247 Expat Insurance routinely sets up Spanish private health insurance for visa applicants using passport details before NIE is issued. We work with Spanish-licensed insurers. We handle the policy setup, certificate, and the later update with NIE and TIE. Available seven days a week. Get in touch via the contact page, the quote form or WhatsApp. Related guides: requirements guide, compliance check, certificate guide, timing guide, monthly payment guide, cost guide. See also our visa health insurance hub and health insurance for expats page.
Yes, this is normal for visa applicants who have not yet received their NIE. The important point is that the certificate matches the passport used in the visa application. Consulates routinely accept certificates referencing passport details for applicants who haven’t yet received NIE.
Yes. Spanish-licensed insurers routinely set up policies using passport details for visa applicants who don’t yet have NIE. The certificate issued at this stage works for consulate submission. NIE is added later once issued.
Full name (as on passport), passport number and country, date of birth, nationality, current and intended Spanish address (if known), visa route, intended arrival date, pre-existing condition disclosure, contact details, and payment details.
Yes — certificates referencing passport details are standard for visa-stage cover. Consulates accept these routinely for applicants who haven’t yet received NIE.
Depending on the visa route: at the consulate stamp at the end of the visa application, OR after arrival at the local police station or Extranjería office. Always after visa application acceptance, never before.
Contact the insurer (or your insurance adviser) with the NIE number. The insurer updates the policy identifier from passport to NIE. Usually same-day, free of charge.
The TIE is the physical residency card issued some weeks after arrival. Some insurers prefer the TIE referenced once issued; others continue using NIE. Either works for the policy ongoing.
Yes — most Spanish insurers accept Visa and Mastercard from international issuers. Some accept American Express. Annual upfront payment on an international card is the simplest path before you have a Spanish bank account.
Sometimes — some insurers accept monthly card billing from international cards. Many applicants pay annual upfront initially and switch to monthly direct debit from a Spanish bank account at first renewal. See our monthly payment guide.
Generally no for Spanish visa applications — Spanish visas typically require Spanish-licensed insurer cover, regardless of NIE status. The NIE issue is separate from the insurer-license issue.
Usually within one business day of policy setup. Spanish insurers issue certificates digitally and these are accepted by consulates as standard.
Most Spanish insurers allow cancellation with proof of visa refusal, with pro-rata refund minus an administrative fee. The policy is then closed; you keep cover up to the refund date.
The policy start date is typically set to align with the visa effective date (or the date the consulate appointment is scheduled). The policy is live before NIE is issued, with passport as the identifier.
Yes — family policies covering multiple members can be set up with passport details for all members before NIE is issued.
Some insurers issue a fresh certificate referencing NIE after the update; others maintain the original certificate and add NIE in the policy file. Either is fine.
Same cost — setting up before vs after NIE doesn’t affect premium. The policy structure and cover are identical; only the identifier reference differs.
Tell us your visa route and passport details. We will arrange the cover and certificate — usually within one business day, with NIE updated later when issued.
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