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The Maternity Care Pathway in Spain — Public + Private for Expats — 2026 Guide

Spain delivers some of the safest, most respectful maternity care in the world — in both the public SNS and the private hospital network. Here is exactly how the pathway works from booking appointment to post-natal paediatric review, what insurance carencias mean for expat mothers, and how Sanitas and Caser handle pregnancy in practice.

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Why Spanish Maternity Care Is Among the Best in the World

Spain has one of the lowest maternal and neonatal mortality rates on the planet — consistently in the global top 10 alongside the Nordics and Japan, per World Health Organization tracking on who.int . The clinical backbone sits with the Sociedad Española de Ginecología y Obstetricia (SEGO) , whose protocols govern public and private practice alike, and the Ministerio de Sanidad Estrategia de Atención al Parto Normal, which has driven the steady move toward respectful, evidence-based, mother-centred birth.

What expats notice first is the structure. In the public SNS you get a midwife-led pregnancy with regular ecografías, scheduled obstetric reviews, an organised birth plan and hospital delivery in a teaching or regional hospital with a neonatology unit on site. In the private network — with Sanitas, Caser and a handful of other DGSFP-registered insurers — you get continuity with the same consultant obstetrician throughout, a private room with en-suite bathroom, a companion bed for your partner, and direct booking of every appointment without GP triage.

The honest headline for expats: both pathways are excellent. The real decisions are whether your insurance carencia (waiting period) has been served before you conceive, which obstetrician you want, where you would like to deliver, and how much continuity and language access matters to you. The medical safety of the birth itself is world-class on either track.

83.5 yrsFemale life expectancy at birth in Spain — one of the highest globally per INE
~3 / 100,000Maternal mortality ratio — among the lowest in the OECD per WHO Global Health Observatory
3 ecografíasSEGO-recommended minimum routine ultrasounds for low-risk pregnancy — first trimester, 20-week morphological, third trimester
8–12 monthsTypical maternity carencia on Spanish private health policies — you must hold cover before conception, not after

The 6 Things Every Expectant Expat Needs to Understand

Spanish maternity care is well organised and well funded — but the rules around who pays, who treats you and which hospital you deliver in are set early. Get these six points right at the start and the rest of the pathway runs cleanly.

1. Two Excellent Pathways, Not One

The SNS public pathway and the private hospital pathway are both safe, modern and evidence-based. SNS gives you midwife-led continuity with scheduled obstetric input; private gives you the same consultant obstetrician at every visit and at delivery. You can switch tracks mid-pregnancy — many expats do.

2. The Carencia Rule Decides Everything

Spanish private maternity cover comes with a carencia (waiting period) of typically 8 to 12 months. You must hold the policy before you conceive, not after the test turns positive. Sanitas and Caser both apply maternity carencias — the policy you choose today shapes the birth you can fund in nine months' time.

3. Midwife-Led Is the Spanish Default

The matrona (midwife) is central to both public and private pathways. In the SNS she runs most antenatal appointments, classes (preparación al parto) and post-natal recovery. In private, she works alongside your consultant obstetrician. Spain's matrona profession is highly trained and respected.

4. Ecografías Are Routine, Frequent and Free at Point of Use

SEGO protocol guarantees at least three routine ultrasounds in low-risk pregnancy: dating scan around 11–13 weeks, morphology scan at 20 weeks, growth scan around 32–34 weeks. Most regions and private clinics do more — including early viability scans — with high-resolution equipment as standard.

5. Hospital Birth Is Standard

Roughly 99% of births in Spain happen in hospital — public or private — with full obstetric, anaesthetic and neonatal back-up. Home birth and freestanding birth-centre options exist but are uncommon and rarely covered by insurance. Hospital birth is the SNS and private default.

6. Post-Natal Paediatric Care Starts Immediately

Newborns receive a paediatric review within hours of birth, the heel-prick screening (prueba del talón) for metabolic disorders in days one to three, hearing screening before discharge, and a structured well-baby follow-up calendar through to age 14. Private policies usually add the baby for free for an initial period.

The Public SNS Maternity Pathway — Step by Step

The Spanish public pathway is midwife-led, hospital-based and follows SEGO protocols. Once you confirm pregnancy, you book in at your centro de salud and the pathway runs to a predictable rhythm through to discharge after delivery. This is what each step actually looks like in practice.

  • Booking appointment (8–10 weeks). You see your médico de cabecera with a positive pregnancy test. You are referred to the matrona at your centro de salud who opens your antenatal record, takes a full history and orders first-trimester bloods and the dating scan.
  • First-trimester combined screening (11–13+6 weeks). Dating ultrasound, nuchal translucency, maternal serum bloods and risk calculation for trisomies 21, 18 and 13. Many regions now also offer non-invasive prenatal testing (NIPT) to high-risk pregnancies on the SNS.
  • Second-trimester morphology scan (19–22 weeks). The detailed anatomy ecografía, typically done at the hospital obstetric ultrasound clinic. This is the longest and most diagnostic of the routine scans — structural anomalies, placenta site and amniotic fluid are all assessed.
  • Midwife review appointments. Around every 4–6 weeks early, every 2–3 weeks from 28 weeks, weekly from 36 weeks. Blood pressure, urine, weight, foetal heart, fundal height, gestational diabetes screening at 24–28 weeks via the O'Sullivan test.
  • Preparación al parto classes. Free group antenatal classes run by the matronas at the centro de salud from around 28–30 weeks — physiology of labour, breathing, positions, pain relief options, breastfeeding and newborn care. Partners are welcomed.
  • Third-trimester growth scan (32–36 weeks). Foetal growth, amniotic fluid, placenta and presentation. If you are not cephalic by ~36 weeks you will be offered external cephalic version (ECV) under hospital obstetric supervision.
  • Birth plan (plan de parto). Spain's Estrategia de Atención al Parto Normal guarantees the right to a written birth plan. You discuss preferences for mobility, pain relief, monitoring, episiotomy avoidance, skin-to-skin and delayed cord clamping with your matrona, who files it in your hospital record.
  • Delivery at your reference hospital. You go to urgencias de maternidad or your hospital's paritorio. SNS rooms typically sleep two postnatal patients per room with rotating visiting hours; a partner can usually stay through labour and delivery, with regional rules on overnight stays.
  • Post-natal stay and discharge. Vaginal birth typically 24–48 hours in hospital; c-section 48–72 hours. Heel-prick screening, hearing screening, paediatric exam and breastfeeding support all happen before discharge. The matrona at your centro de salud follows up within 7–10 days.

The Private Maternity Pathway — What Sanitas and Caser Actually Deliver

Private maternity in Spain looks different in three concrete ways: continuity with the same obstetrician at every appointment and at delivery, comfort in a private room with en-suite bathroom and companion bed, and access with direct specialist booking and English-speaking clinicians common in expat-focused hospitals. The medical safety floor is identical — SEGO protocols apply — but the experience is bespoke.

Same Obstetrician End to End

You choose your consultant obstetrician at first booking and stay with them through every antenatal appointment, every scan, the delivery itself and the six-week postnatal review. Continuity is the single biggest practical difference between private and SNS — and the reason most private patients quote in surveys.

Private Room with En-Suite

You labour and recover in a private room with companion bed for your partner, en-suite bathroom, and a calmer post-natal environment than the typical two-bed SNS recovery bay. Family visiting hours are more flexible. The room is included in your maternity benefit at no additional cost on full Sanitas and Caser policies.

Direct Booking, No GP Gatekeeper

You self-refer to your obstetrician from day one — no médico de cabecera derivación needed. Scans, blood tests and specialist input (foetal medicine, endocrinology in gestational diabetes, anaesthetic pre-assessment) are booked directly through the insurer's cuadro médico.

English-Speaking Clinicians as Standard

In expat-focused hospitals on the Costa del Sol, Madrid, Barcelona, the Balearics and Costa Blanca, English-speaking obstetricians, paediatricians and midwives are common — particularly at hospitals that work closely with Sanitas and Caser. You can filter your consultant by language in the insurer apps.

Frequent Ecografías Included

Private pathways typically deliver more scans than SNS protocol — an early viability ecografía around 7–8 weeks, the combined first-trimester screen, the 20-week morphology, an additional growth scan around 28 weeks and the standard third-trimester scan. 4D scans are usually available as an optional extra.

Newborn on the Policy

Both Sanitas and Caser typically add the newborn to the mother's policy from birth, with no medical underwriting in the immediate window after delivery. The baby's first paediatric exams, heel-prick, hearing screen and any neonatal care are covered under the maternity benefit and the newly extended policy.

Carencia — The Waiting Period Rule Every Expat Mother Must Understand

Spanish private health policies apply periodos de carencia — waiting periods before specific high-value benefits become available. Maternity sits at the top of that list. Get the carencia right at policy inception and the entire private pathway is open to you; get it wrong and you fall back on the SNS, regardless of which premium you have been paying.

  • Typical maternity carencia: 8–12 months. Most Spanish private insurers — including Sanitas and Caser — apply an 8 to 12 month waiting period before maternity benefits, hospital delivery and the obstetric pathway are claimable. Read your policy schedule — the exact months are stated.
  • The clock starts on policy inception. Carencia counts from the effective date of the policy, not from conception. You must hold the policy before you conceive to be confident of being inside the carencia window when you deliver.
  • Antenatal appointments may have their own clock. Some insurers wait less time for outpatient antenatal consultations and scans than for hospital delivery itself — typically 6–8 months. Check your condicionado general for the breakdown between consultation, diagnostic and hospitalisation carencias.
  • Pregnancy already underway = not covered for that pregnancy. If you are already pregnant at policy inception, that pregnancy is treated as a pre-existing condition and the maternity benefit will not pay for it. You can still hold the policy for everything else — you just deliver on the SNS or self-pay.
  • Group and corporate policies sometimes waive carencia. Employer schemes, large family policies and certain transfers from another DGSFP insurer can include partial or full carencia waiver. Always ask before assuming — and always get the waiver confirmed in writing on the policy schedule.
  • Newborn enrolment usually has no carencia. Adding the baby to the mother's policy within a defined window after birth (typically 30 days) is processed without medical underwriting and without carencia — immediate cover for paediatric appointments, vaccines, A&E and hospitalisation.
  • Caesarean and complications are inside maternity cover. Once carencia is served, both elective and emergency c-sections, neonatal admission, instrumental delivery and complications of pregnancy are covered under the same maternity hospitalisation benefit — not as separate add-ons.
  • If you are planning to conceive in 2026. Take out cover now — not in the month you start trying. An 8–12 month carencia plus the average time to conceive plus 40 weeks of pregnancy is exactly why expat couples who delay end up on the SNS for the first baby.

Sanitas Mamá and Caser Salud Familiar — Maternity Benefits Compared

Sanitas and Caser are the two insurers we recommend most often to expat families in Spain — both DGSFP-registered, both with extensive cuadro médico networks for obstetrics and paediatrics, both with strong English-speaking access in major expat regions. Here is how the maternity offer breaks down on the ground.

Sanitas Mamá — Programme Structure

Sanitas runs a dedicated maternity programme combining obstetric visits, scans, blood tests, preparation classes, paediatric postnatal review and 24/7 midwife telephone support. Delivery is at a Sanitas hospital (or partner clinic) in a private room. The Sanitas app books appointments and stores your record.

Caser Salud Familiar — Family-First Design

Caser Salud Familiar is built around the family unit — mother, partner and children on the same policy with shared cuadro médico. Maternity benefits include the full obstetric pathway, hospital delivery in a private room, neonatology and immediate enrolment of the newborn.

Hospital Networks

Sanitas runs its own hospital group and contracts widely. Caser uses an extensive partner network including major private hospitals in Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, the Balearics and the costas. In practice, both insurers cover most leading expat-focused maternity hospitals — check your local cuadro.

Carencia in Practice

Both Sanitas and Caser apply maternity carencias in the typical 8–12 month range. Antenatal consultations and routine scans often have shorter waiting periods than hospital delivery itself. Group and family policies, or transfers from another DGSFP insurer with continuous cover, may receive partial waiver.

Newborn Enrolment

Both insurers add the newborn to the mother's policy from birth with no medical underwriting, provided enrolment is filed within the policy's stated window after delivery. Paediatric appointments, vaccines, well-baby checks and A&E are covered from day one of the baby's life.

Post-Natal Paediatric Pathway

Both Sanitas and Caser provide structured paediatric follow-up — the Spanish well-baby calendar of reviews and vaccinations through the first years, in line with regional health programmes and the Ministerio de Sanidad calendar. Direct booking with your chosen paediatrician.

Choosing Public, Private — or Both

The honest answer for most expat families is the dual-track pattern: SNS as the safety net, private as the everyday channel. Here is how to think it through based on your situation, your timing and your priorities.

  • Public-only. The right answer if you are fully SNS-entitled (employed, autónomo, S1, Convenio) and value the midwife-led continuity and natural-birth orientation of Spanish public maternity. Clinically excellent, free at the point of use, with strong outcomes — the trade-offs are shared rooms, less flexibility on consultant choice and limited English in some regions.
  • Private-only. The right answer if you are NLV/DNV in Year 1 without SNS access — you must have private cover anyway and the maternity benefit is built in. Also the right answer if continuity with one obstetrician, a private room with companion bed and English-speaking care matter to you above all else.
  • Dual-track. The pattern most settled expat families end up with. SNS as the foundation for major emergencies, paediatric A&E and complex care; Sanitas or Caser on top for routine obstetric continuity, the private hospital room, English-speaking paediatrician and faster access to scans and specialists.
  • Timing your private cover. If maternity is on the horizon, take out cover before you start trying. The 8–12 month carencia means delaying until you are pregnant locks you out of the private pathway for that pregnancy. Couples planning conception in 2026 should already hold cover today.
  • Mid-pregnancy switch. Switching to private mid-pregnancy with a new insurer rarely works because of carencia — the pregnancy is already a pre-existing condition. Continuous cover transfers between DGSFP insurers, with the carencia clock continuing, can be possible — ask before you cancel anything.
  • Geographic factor. In Madrid, Barcelona, Mallorca, Marbella, Alicante and Valencia, the private hospital network is dense and English-speaking obstetricians easy to find. In rural inland regions, private options thin out — the SNS is often the practical and excellent choice.
  • High-risk and complex pregnancies. The deepest specialist infrastructure for foetal medicine, maternal-foetal cardiology, complex twins and preterm neonatology sits in the SNS teaching hospitals — La Paz, Vall d'Hebron, Clínic, 12 de Octubre, Virgen del Rocío. Many complex cases route into these regardless of insurance status.
  • Where to learn more. The Spanish charity El Parto es Nuestro is the leading patient-rights and evidence-based maternity advocacy group in Spain — an invaluable resource on birth plans, respectful care and rights in both pathways.

The 6 Most Common Mistakes Expat Mothers Make — And How to Avoid Them

Maternity is the single benefit that we see expats get wrong most often — almost always because of timing or carencia confusion. These are the errors that keep our WhatsApp line busy. The first two cause the most heartache.

1. Buying Cover After the Test Turns Positive

The single most expensive mistake. By the time you are 6–8 weeks pregnant and looking for cover, you are already inside the carencia and the maternity benefit will not pay for that pregnancy. You can still take out a policy — for everything else — but the birth itself will be SNS or self-pay.

2. Assuming the NLV Policy Covers Maternity Immediately

NLV-grade policies satisfy the consulate from day one for no-copay general cover, but the maternity benefit still has its own carencia. Read the policy schedule. Pregnancy benefit before month 8–12 is rare and always written in the contract — never assumed.

3. Switching Insurers Mid-Pregnancy

The new insurer treats the pregnancy as pre-existing and excludes it. Stay with your current insurer for that pregnancy, even if a competitor looks cheaper — the saving disappears the moment a c-section is needed and the new insurer declines the claim.

4. Cancelling Private Cover to "Save Money" Once SNS Kicks In

If you have just gained SNS entitlement through autónomo registration or a spouse's employment, do not cancel private cover until after delivery and the baby's first paediatric reviews are complete. The continuity benefit and the newborn enrolment window are too valuable to lose.

5. Not Registering the Baby Within the Enrolment Window

Both Sanitas and Caser allow newborn enrolment without underwriting — but the window has a deadline (typically 30 days after birth). Miss it and the baby has to be added through normal application, with potential exclusions if any neonatal issues are noted. File the paperwork in week one.

6. Skipping the Birth Plan Conversation

In both the SNS and the private pathway you have the right to a written plan de parto. Expats who skip the conversation often discover too late that their preferences on mobility, monitoring, pain relief or episiotomy avoidance were never recorded. Write it, discuss it, file it.

Why Expat Families Choose 247 Expat Insurance for Maternity Cover

We place hundreds of family policies a year for expats in Spain — many of them with maternity in the next 12–24 months. The brief is always the same: get the carencia served before conception, line up the right obstetrician network, and make sure the newborn is on cover from day one. We do that, in English, every working week.

Sanitas and Caser, Honestly Compared

We place the two leading expat-friendly maternity insurers — Sanitas and Caser — and we tell you which one fits your hospital preference, your region, your obstetrician shortlist and your timing. No bias, no upselling.

Carencia-Aware Planning

We map your conception timeline against the policy's maternity carencia and tell you exactly when to take cover out so you are inside the benefit window at delivery — not three weeks short of it.

NLV and DNV Consulate Compliance

Every policy we place is DGSFP-registered, no-copay, no-deductible and consulate-ready for NLV, DNV, student and non-EU family residency applications — with the maternity benefit fully written in.

Newborn Enrolment, Same Week

We handle the newborn enrolment paperwork with Sanitas or Caser the same week the baby is born — well inside the 30-day window — so paediatric cover is live from the heel-prick onward.

English-Speaking, 7 Days a Week

Maternity decisions don't wait for Monday office hours. We answer WhatsApp and phone seven days a week — including the weekend before a 20-week scan or a hospital choice deadline — in fluent English.

Dual-Track Planning

If the SNS is the right answer for delivery and private is the right answer for paediatric continuity, we say so. We design lean top-ups that complement the SNS rather than duplicate it — the smart pattern for settled expat families.

Spanish Maternity Care Frequently Asked Questions

Is Spanish maternity care actually safe compared to the UK, US or Australia?
Yes — statistically among the safest in the world. Spain's maternal mortality ratio, neonatal mortality rate and stillbirth rate are all in the global top tier, on par with or better than the UK, US, Australia, Germany and France, per WHO Global Health Observatory and OECD Health Statistics. Both public and private hospitals follow SEGO protocols and the Ministerio de Sanidad Estrategia de Atención al Parto Normal.
How long is the carencia for maternity on Sanitas and Caser policies?
Typically 8 to 12 months from policy inception for the hospital delivery benefit, with antenatal consultations and routine scans sometimes available sooner (6–8 months). Exact figures are written in your condicionado general — always confirm in writing before you assume. If you are planning conception, take cover out before you start trying, not after.
Can I deliver on the SNS even if I have private insurance?
Yes — provided you are SNS-entitled through employment, autónomo, S1, Convenio Especial or as a registered beneficiario. Many expat families with private cover still choose SNS delivery for the midwife-led model, the major teaching-hospital infrastructure or specifically high-risk pregnancies that benefit from the SNS's deep foetal medicine networks at hospitals like La Paz, Vall d'Hebron or 12 de Octubre.
Will the baby be covered immediately on my policy?
Yes — both Sanitas and Caser typically add the newborn to the mother's policy with no medical underwriting and no carencia, provided enrolment is filed within the policy's stated window after birth (usually 30 days). Paediatric appointments, the heel-prick screening, hearing screening, vaccinations and any neonatal admission are all covered from day one of the baby's life.
What is a plan de parto and how do I get one?
A plan de parto is a written birth plan recording your preferences on mobility, monitoring, pain relief, episiotomy, skin-to-skin, delayed cord clamping, partner presence and post-natal care. It is a right under the Ministerio de Sanidad Estrategia de Atención al Parto Normal, in both SNS and private. You discuss it with your matrona or obstetrician from around 32 weeks and file the signed version in your hospital record. The charity El Parto es Nuestro publishes excellent template birth plans.
How many ecografías will I have during pregnancy in Spain?
SEGO protocol guarantees a minimum of three routine scans for low-risk pregnancy — dating scan around 11–13 weeks, morphology scan at 20 weeks, growth scan around 32–36 weeks — plus first-trimester combined screening for chromosomal conditions. Private pathways with Sanitas or Caser typically add an early viability scan around 7–8 weeks and an extra growth scan around 28 weeks, with 4D scans available as an optional extra. Higher-risk pregnancies receive more frequent monitoring on both pathways.

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Get Family Cover With Maternity Built In — Before You Need It

Maternity carencias mean the policy you take out today shapes the birth you can fund nine months from now. Sanitas Mamá and Caser Salud Familiar both deliver excellent obstetric pathways — but only if cover starts before conception. We place both, every working day, in fluent English, seven days a week.

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