Spanish Paediatrician System for Expat Kids: The Complete Guide

In Spain every child from birth to 14 (and in some regions 15) sees a dedicated pediatra – not a GP – for routine and acute care. Here is how the system works, how to find an English-speaking paediatrician, and what cover gets your family the fastest access.

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Why Paediatric Care in Spain Works Differently

In the UK, Ireland, the US and Australia, your family GP usually treats children alongside adults until adolescence. In Spain it is structured differently: every child registered with the public Sistema Nacional de Salud (SNS) is automatically assigned a dedicated pediatra at their centro de salud, who provides all primary care – from sniffles to routine check-ups – until age 14 (and 15 in some regions including Catalonia, Navarra and parts of the Basque Country).

The pediatra is a four-year MIR-trained specialist in Pediatría y Áreas Específicas, a discipline overseen by the Asociación Española de Pediatría (AEP). They know your child's growth curves, vaccination history and developmental milestones in detail, and run the standardised programa del niño sano followed across all 17 autonomous communities.

For expat families, the question is rarely whether to use the public or private pediatra – it is how to get faster access, English-language consultations and reliable out-of-hours cover. This guide walks through the public system, private alternatives via the Sanitas and Caser cuadros médicos, vaccination schedules and after-hours urgencias pediátricas.

0–14Standard age range covered by a Spanish pediatra (15 in some regions)
4 yearsMIR specialist training required to qualify as a pediatra
11 visitsTypical revisiones del niño sano from birth to age 14
24/7Urgencias pediátricas access via the right private policy

What's Covered in This Guide

From the public-system pediatra to the Caser and Sanitas cuadros médicos, vaccine schedules and overnight urgencias, here is everything an expat family needs to know about paediatric care in Spain.

Public vs Private Pediatra

How your assigned SNS pediatra works at the centro de salud – and where private cover via Caser or Sanitas closes the gaps on waiting times and language.

The Calendario Vacunal

Spain's national vaccination schedule published by the Ministerio de Sanidad – what is given, when, and how it lines up with UK, Irish and US schedules.

Revisiones del Niño Sano

The standardised well-child programme: 11 scheduled visits from the first week of life through to age 14, what's checked at each one and how to book in private.

English-Speaking Paediatricians

How to filter the Sanitas and Caser cuadros médicos by idioma and find bilingual pediatras in your province.

Urgencias Pediátricas

Out-of-hours and weekend care via the Sociedad Española de Urgencias de Pediatría (SEUP) hospitals – and the 24/7 video paediatrics options in private policies.

Common Conditions & Referrals

How a Spanish pediatra handles asthma, eczema, food allergies, ADHD and speech delays – and the path to a private specialist when needed.

How the Public Pediatra System Works

The Sistema Nacional de Salud guarantees every resident child a dedicated paediatrician from birth to age 14 (15 in some regions). Here is what that looks like in practice.

  • Assignment is automatic on registration. Once your child is added to your tarjeta sanitaria as a beneficiary, the centro de salud assigns a pediatra based on your registered address – usually the same clinic where you see your médico de cabecera, but with a separate consulta de pediatría.
  • Appointments use cita previa. You book either through the regional health app (Salud Madrid, La Meva Salut Catalonia, ClicSalud+ Andalucía, Osakidetza in the Basque Country, etc) or by phone to the centro de salud. Routine slots can run a week or two out; same-day urgent slots are usually held back for symptomatic children.
  • The pediatra handles primary care end-to-end. Coughs, ear infections, gastroenteritis, eczema, behavioural concerns, school certificates, sports medicals, sick notes and prescription repeats all route through the pediatra, not a GP. They also issue derivaciones (referrals) to hospital specialists.
  • Revisiones del niño sano are scheduled in advance. The well-child programme spans roughly 11 visits from the neonatal week through to age 14. The pediatra (or paediatric nurse) records weight, height, head circumference, developmental milestones, vision, hearing, blood pressure and BMI.
  • Vaccines are administered at the centro de salud. Following the Ministerio de Sanidad calendario vacunal, jabs are given free of charge in the same visit as the relevant revisión. Catch-up schedules exist for children arriving from the UK, US, Ireland and Australia – the pediatra will adjust based on a translated immunisation history.
  • At 14 (or 15) the child transitions to a médico de cabecera. The handover is administrative – the centro de salud simply re-assigns the patient. Bring this up at the final revisión so prescriptions and chronic-condition management transfer cleanly.
  • Out-of-hours care goes to urgencias. Centros de salud close evenings and weekends. After hours, paediatric emergencies route to the urgencias pediátricas department at the nearest public hospital – classified and resourced by the Sociedad Española de Urgencias de Pediatría.

Private Pediatra Cover with Sanitas and Caser

Private cover is the standard route for expat families wanting English-language paediatric consultations, shorter waiting times and 24/7 urgencias access. Here is how the two insurers we work with deliver paediatric care.

Sanitas Paediatric Network

The Sanitas cuadro médico includes its own Sanitas Milénium and Sanitas La Moraleja paediatric clinics, plus an extensive concertado network. The directory filter lets you select "pediatría" as the specialty and "inglés" as the idioma.

Caser Paediatric Network

Caser partners with major private hospital groups including HM Hospitales, Vithas and Quirónsalud. Its cuadro médico is strong on the Costa del Sol, Costa Blanca and Mallorca, with dedicated paediatric clinics in each.

24/7 Video Paediatrics

Both Sanitas (via Blua) and Caser (via Caser Salud Digital) offer round-the-clock paediatric video consultations – useful for evening fevers, rashes and feeding questions when a physical visit can wait until morning.

Newborn & Maternity Cover

Sanitas and Caser maternity policies include the neonatal pediatra exam, hearing screening, metabolic heel-prick (prueba del talón) and the first month of paediatric consultations for the newborn at no extra cost.

Specialist Referrals

From a private pediatra, referrals to paediatric cardiology, allergology, neurology, dermatology and endocrinology stay inside the network. No NHS-style waiting list – most second opinions are booked within a week.

Vaccines Beyond the Calendar

Some optional vaccines – rotavirus in some regions, meningococcal B in babies, HPV in boys at younger ages – sit outside the free public calendar. Private cover often makes the cost predictable and the timing flexible.

The Calendario Vacunal: What Your Child Will Receive

Spain follows a national vaccination schedule coordinated by the Ministerio de Sanidad and aligned with World Health Organisation (OMS) guidance. Regional autonomous communities can add jabs, but never remove the national core.

  • 0–2 months: Hepatitis B at birth, then hexavalent (DTaP-IPV-Hib-HepB) plus pneumococcal at 2 months. A meningococcal B series typically begins around 2–4 months depending on region.
  • 4 months: second hexavalent and second pneumococcal. The 4-month revisión del niño sano usually combines weight check, hip ultrasound review and these immunisations.
  • 11–12 months: third hexavalent, third pneumococcal and meningococcal C. First triple vírica (MMR / triple vírica) typically given at 12 months.
  • 15 months: chickenpox (varicela) added in 2016 to the universal national calendar. Some regions co-administer with the MMR booster.
  • 3–4 years: second MMR and second varicela. The 4-year revisión covers school readiness and visual acuity in addition to immunisation top-ups.
  • 6 years: DTaP-IPV booster. Often combined with a routine dental check at the centro de salud.
  • 12 years: HPV (now both boys and girls under the 2023 expansion), meningococcal ACWY booster. A second varicela catch-up is offered if the earlier series is incomplete.
  • 14 years: Tdap booster. The final pediatra visit before transition to a médico de cabecera in most autonomous communities.
  • Catch-up for arrivals from the UK, US, Ireland and Australia. The AEP publishes a calendario de vacunaciones acelerado at aeped.es covering children who arrive partway through the standard schedule.

7 Mistakes Expat Parents Make Navigating Paediatric Care

These are the avoidable errors we see most often when international families try to set up paediatric care in Spain. Skip them and you will save weeks of frustration and a lot of unnecessary urgencias trips.

  • Booking a GP for a child. A médico de cabecera cannot legally manage paediatric primary care in Spain – the consult is structured around the pediatra. Even in private clinics, ask specifically for pediatría, not medicina general.
  • Skipping revisiones del niño sano. The 11-visit programme is how Spanish pediatras catch growth, developmental, vision and hearing issues early. Missed visits make later referrals harder because the baseline data is incomplete.
  • Assuming UK or US vaccines fully cover the Spanish schedule. The calendars differ – especially around meningococcal B, varicela and HPV timing. Bring a translated immunisation record (the UK Red Book or US CDC card) to the first pediatra visit so they can map gaps.
  • Heading to urgencias for non-emergencies. Spanish hospital triage is excellent but slow on weekends. For fevers under 39°C, mild rashes and feeding questions, the 24/7 video paediatrics line on a Sanitas or Caser policy resolves most issues in 15 minutes.
  • Not asking about "copago" on family policies. A family policy with copay charges per paediatric visit can add up fast with young children – sin copago is usually better value once you factor in winter coughs and rashes.
  • Missing dental cover for kids. Public-system PADI (Plan de Atención Dental Infantil) covers basic check-ups in most regions, but private dental for kids is cheap and worth adding to a family policy – orthodontics in particular is much more affordable when bundled.
  • Forgetting to register newborns within 30 days. Birth registration at the Registro Civil triggers the tarjeta sanitaria, which in turn assigns a public pediatra and unlocks the calendario vacunal. Late registration delays the 2-month jabs.

Why Expat Families Trust 247 Expat Insurance

Choosing the right family policy is the single biggest decision in your child's access to fast, English-language paediatric care. Here is why expat families across Spain choose us for their health cover.

DGSFP-Registered

We are a fully registered Spanish insurance brokerage under the DGSFP – the same regulator that oversees every legal insurer in Spain.

English Throughout

Every conversation, every policy document and every claim is handled in clear English by a real human, not a chatbot.

7 Days a Week

Sick child on a Sunday, missed vaccine appointment, urgent specialist referral? Our team is reachable seven days a week including bank holidays.

Family Specialists

We compare quotes from Sanitas and Caser to match your postcode to the cuadro médico with the right English-speaking pediatra.

Newborn-Ready

From maternity cover through neonatal exam to the first calendario vacunal jabs, our team understands every step of the Spanish paediatric pathway.

Claims Advocacy

If you ever need to claim, change pediatra or expand cover for a new baby, we deal with the insurer in Spanish on your behalf.

Frequently Asked Questions

The most common questions expat parents ask us about paediatric care in Spain.

Until what age does a Spanish pediatra treat my child?
The standard upper limit is 14 across most of Spain, with Catalonia, Navarra and parts of the Basque Country extending paediatric care to 15. After that age, the centro de salud transfers your child to a médico de cabecera, and private policies move them to general adult cover. Some private clinics – particularly within the Sanitas network – offer adolescent medicine clinics that bridge the transition.
Can I get an English-speaking pediatra on the public system?
Occasionally, in centros de salud serving expat-heavy postcodes such as San Pedro de Alcántara, Jávea, Palma centre and parts of Madrid. There is no language guarantee, and the public assignment is based purely on your registered address. The reliable route is private cover via a language-filtered cuadro médico – both Sanitas and Caser publish "inglés" as a filter on their pediatría listings.
What does a revisión del niño sano actually cover?
The 11-visit Programa del Niño Sano standardised by the Asociación Española de Pediatría includes weight, height, head circumference, developmental milestones, vision and hearing screening, BMI, blood pressure, dietary advice and immunisation review. At specific ages the pediatra also screens for hip dysplasia, cryptorchidism, scoliosis and dental development. Each visit doubles as a vaccine appointment when the calendario vacunal calls for one.
What if my child needs urgent care at night or on a weekend?
Public urgencias pediátricas departments at major hospitals are open 24/7 – the Sociedad Española de Urgencias de Pediatría accredits dedicated paediatric emergency rooms in most provinces. For non-life-threatening issues, the 24/7 video paediatrics service on Sanitas Blua or Caser Salud Digital usually resolves the problem from your sofa. For anything life-threatening, dial 112.
Are Spanish vaccines free even on a private policy?
National calendario vacunal jabs are free at the centro de salud regardless of whether you also hold private cover – the public system funds them. Optional vaccines outside the national calendar (such as private rotavirus, certain meningococcal schedules, additional travel vaccines) are usually paid separately or partly reimbursed by your private policy. Sanitas and Caser both list vaccine reimbursement in their family policy schedules.
How does my child get a paediatric specialist referral?
On the public system, a derivación from your pediatra at the centro de salud routes the case to the relevant hospital department – waiting times vary widely by region. On a Sanitas or Caser private policy, the pediatra in the cuadro médico authorises the referral and you book the specialist directly through the insurer's app, typically within days. Both insurers cover paediatric allergy, cardiology, neurology, dermatology, endocrinology, gastroenterology and developmental paediatrics.

Insurance Cover That Matches Your Family's New Spanish Life

Choosing the right family health policy is the single biggest factor in how quickly you access English-speaking paediatric care. Make sure your wider cover works just as hard.

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Related Guides for Expat Families in Spain

More step-by-step guides to help you navigate the Spanish health system with confidence.

Finding an English-Speaking GP in Spain

How to filter cuadros médicos, use Doctoralia and verify colegiado numbers for adult primary care.

Booking a Public Doctor Appointment in Spain

Using cita previa to book at your centro de salud, the new Mi Carpeta Ciudadana apps and what to bring.

Getting Your Tarjeta Sanitaria in Spain

The public health card application process for the whole family, regional variations and what cover it actually gives you.

How to Find Your Centro de Salud in Spain

How public-system catchment areas work, registering children with your assigned clinic and changing pediatra if needed.

Ready to Set Up Paediatric Cover for Your Family?

Get a tailored family health insurance quote in minutes from our DGSFP-registered, English-speaking team – we match your postcode to the cuadro médico with the right pediatra for your children.

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