Repatriation cover (repatriación sanitaria) is one of the four mandatory clauses on a Spanish visa-compliant health insurance certificate. It means the policy pays for transferring you back to your country of origin in the event of a serious medical incident, and for repatriation of mortal remains in the event of death abroad. This page explains exactly what repatriation cover is, why it’s a non-negotiable visa requirement, how it works in practice, and what to expect if you ever need to claim against it.
Visa cover with repatriation included
Spanish-regulated, consulate-accepted, bilingual certificate same day. English-speaking advisers, seven days a week.
Repatriation cover within a Spanish-regulated health policy provides two distinct benefits:
Medical repatriation: the policy organises and pays for transferring the insured back to their country of origin (or another agreed country) for medical treatment in the event of a serious episode that local treatment cannot or should not handle. This includes air ambulance, medically-staffed transfer, and ground transport at both ends.
Repatriation of mortal remains: in the event of death of the insured outside their country of origin, the policy organises and pays for the return of remains to the country of origin for funeral arrangements.
Both benefits are organised through the insurer’s 24/7 international assistance team, which contracts with global air ambulance providers, regional medical providers and repatriation services. The insured (or their family) calls the assistance team; the team takes over the logistics.
Why it’s a visa requirement
Spain requires that long-stay visa-holders have access to repatriation in case of medical emergency. The reasoning is practical: a foreign national requiring urgent home-country treatment shouldn’t fall into financial distress over an air ambulance flight, and a deceased foreign national’s family shouldn’t face logistics and costs they don’t have. The visa requirement ensures every long-stay resident has this safety net.
The certificate must explicitly state repatriación sanitaria — it’s the language the consulate official looks for.
What triggers a repatriation claim
Serious medical incident where treatment in country of origin is medically preferable (specialist availability, family support, continuity of care)
Inability of local infrastructure to deliver the required treatment (rare in Spain, but possible for rare conditions or remote locations)
Long-term care needs better delivered in the home country (e.g. spinal injury rehabilitation programmes)
Family decision to bring the patient home for end-of-life care, where insurer-approved
Death of the insured — family contacts assistance team; remains repatriation begins
How a repatriation claim works
Family member or treating doctor calls insurer’s assistance team — 24/7 phone line included in policy documents
Insurer assesses medical condition against repatriation criteria with their medical director
If approved, insurer organises: medical transfer (air ambulance, commercial flight with medical escort, or ground ambulance depending on patient condition), travel for accompanying family member where applicable, hospital-to-airport ground transport, receiving hospital arrangements in country of origin
Direct billing: the insurer pays providers directly — the family doesn’t pay upfront
Follow-up: continuation of cover (where applicable) on return to country of origin
What’s typically covered
Medical air ambulance with onboard medical team
Commercial flight with medical escort (where condition permits)
Ground ambulance at both ends
Accompanying family member travel (typically one)
Receiving hospital co-ordination
Mortal remains preparation, transport, customs and import documentation
Documentation translation
24/7 multilingual assistance team contact
Common exclusions
Pre-existing conditions not disclosed: if the medical emergency relates to a condition you didn’t disclose at policy purchase, repatriation may be refused
Conditions arising before policy start date: emergencies before the policy active date aren’t covered
High-risk activities: some adventure sports (heli-skiing, base jumping, etc.) are excluded
Travel against medical advice: if you ignored medical advice to seek immediate treatment in Spain
Repatriation for cosmetic reasons: repatriation must be medically indicated, not patient preference
War zones / sanctioned countries: if you travel outside Spain to a sanctioned destination
Repatriation of mortal remains
The repatriation-of-mortal-remains benefit covers:
Body preparation by funeral home in Spain
Embalming, casket, transport casket and documentation
Air freight to country of origin
Customs and import declarations
Ground transport at destination
Family accompaniment (typically one person) where elected
The benefit is typically capped at a specific amount (in addition to the medical-treatment benefit cap). Where the family chooses cremation in Spain with ashes returned home, the cost is usually substantially below the cap.
Why choose 247 Expat Insurance
All visa policies include repatriation by default — explicit in the certificate
24/7 multilingual assistance contact included in every policy
English-speaking advisers, seven days a week — Spain +34 868 290 730 / UK +44 203 925 8884 / USA +1 646 222 5288 / WhatsApp +34 613 26 88 98
Same-day bilingual visa certificate with repatriation language explicit
Help if a claim is needed — we’ll work with the insurer on your behalf
Visa cover with repatriation
Spanish-regulated, consulate-accepted, bilingual certificate same day. English-speaking advisers, seven days a week.
Reverse mortgages need a personal consultation. Our specialist team will discuss eligibility, amounts and what suits your situation — in clear English.