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Costa del Sol Healthcare for UK Expats: Your Complete 2026 Guide

Costa del Sol Healthcare for UK Expats: Your Complete 2026 Guide

Everything UK expats need to know about Costa del Sol healthcare in 2026: public system access, private insurance costs, S1 forms, and a step-by-step registration guide.

Last updated: June 2026

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MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals

Published June 2026 · 12 min read

How Spanish Healthcare Actually Works: The Public System Explained

Spain's public healthcare system — the Sistema Nacional de Salud (SNS) — consistently ranks among the top ten in the world. In Andalucía, it's administered by the Servicio Andaluz de Salud (SAS), and for UK expats settling on the Costa del Sol, understanding how it functions is the first step to accessing genuinely excellent medical care.

The system operates on three tiers. Your first point of contact is always your local centro de salud (health centre), where you're assigned a médico de cabecera — a GP or family doctor. From there, referrals flow to specialist consultants and, if needed, to public hospitals. Emergency care (urgencias) is available to everyone, regardless of registration status or nationality, at any public hospital 24 hours a day.

Public healthcare in Spain is funded through social security contributions. If you're employed or self-employed (autónomo) in Spain and paying into the social security system, you and your dependants are automatically entitled to full public healthcare coverage. Retirees receiving a UK State Pension can also access the system through the S1 form (more on that below). Since January 2024, Spain also allows residents who don't qualify through employment or an S1 to buy into the public system via the Convenio Especial, which costs approximately €60/month for those under 65 and €157/month for those aged 65 and over in 2026.

The quality of care in the public system is high, but waiting times for non-urgent specialist appointments and elective procedures can be lengthy — averaging 95 days for specialist consultations in Andalucía as of early 2026. This is the primary reason many UK expats opt for private cover as a complement or alternative.

Private Healthcare on the Costa del Sol: What You Get and What It Costs in 2026

Private healthcare on the Costa del Sol is outstanding, relatively affordable compared to the UK private sector, and widely used by the international community. Approximately 30% of Spanish residents carry some form of private health insurance, and among expats on the coast, that figure rises dramatically.

What private cover typically includes

  • Immediate access to GPs, specialists, and diagnostic tests — often within 24–72 hours
  • Choice of doctor and hospital from an extensive network
  • English-speaking practitioners — many private clinics on the Costa del Sol specifically cater to international patients
  • Dental and optical cover (often included or available as add-ons)
  • Mental health services, physiotherapy, and maternity care
  • Repatriation cover and overseas emergency treatment

What it costs in 2026

Private health insurance premiums on the Costa del Sol depend heavily on your age, pre-existing conditions, and the level of cover you choose. Here are realistic monthly premium ranges based on quotes from major Spanish insurers in early 2026:

Age BracketBasic Cover (€/month)Mid-Range Cover (€/month)Comprehensive Cover (€/month)
30–39€45–€65€70–€100€110–€160
40–49€55–€80€85–€130€140–€200
50–59€75–€110€120–€180€190–€280
60–69€110–€160€170–€260€270–€400
70–79€160–€240€250–€380€390–€550

The most popular insurers among expats include Sanitas, Adeslas (SegurCaixa), Asisa, DKV, and MAPFRE. Some international providers like Cigna and Allianz Care also offer policies tailored to expats, though these tend to cost 20–40% more than Spanish domestic policies.

MUNDO Tip: If you're applying for a non-lucrative visa or golden visa to move to Spain, you'll need private health insurance with no co-pays (sin copagos) as a condition of your residency application. Make sure your policy explicitly states this — consulates are increasingly strict about checking. Budget for comprehensive cover from day one.

EHIC, GHIC, and the S1 Form: What Still Works for Brits After Brexit

Brexit fundamentally changed healthcare access for UK nationals in the EU, but several important mechanisms still function. Understanding exactly which ones apply to your situation can save you thousands of pounds per year.

The UK Global Health Insurance Card (GHIC)

The GHIC replaced the EHIC for UK residents and covers medically necessary treatment during temporary stays in Spain. It provides access to state-provided healthcare on the same terms as a Spanish resident — meaning you'll be treated in public hospitals and clinics, and some services may require a small co-payment. The GHIC is free and valid for five years.

Critical limitation: The GHIC covers temporary visits only. If you're living in Spain — even part-time — it is not a substitute for proper health insurance or registration with the Spanish health system. Using a GHIC as your primary healthcare access while resident in Spain is not legally valid and can result in bills being sent to you retrospectively.

The S1 Form

The S1 form is the mechanism that allows UK State Pension recipients (and certain other benefit recipients) to access Spain's public healthcare system at the UK government's expense. If you qualify, this is by far the most valuable healthcare tool available to you as a British expat.

Who qualifies:

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  • Recipients of the UK State Pension who are legally resident in Spain
  • Recipients of certain long-term benefits (e.g., Employment and Support Allowance)
  • Posted workers temporarily assigned to Spain by a UK employer

To obtain an S1, contact the NHS Overseas Healthcare Services team. Once you have it, register the form at your local Instituto Nacional de la Seguridad Social (INSS) office in Spain. You'll then receive a Spanish health card (tarjeta sanitaria) and full access to the SAS system. Processing currently takes 4–8 weeks.

If you're planning a property purchase on the Costa del Sol and approaching retirement, the S1 form should be a central part of your planning. Visit our UK buyers hub for a full breakdown of the residency and administrative steps you'll need to complete.

What about pre-existing EHICs?

If you still hold a valid EHIC issued before 1 January 2021, it remains valid until its expiry date. After that, you'll need to apply for a GHIC. Some UK nationals with dual EU nationality or who retained EU residency rights may still be eligible for an EU-issued EHIC — check with the issuing country.

Health Insurance Costs for UK Expats in Spain: Real Quotes and What Affects Your Premium

Beyond age, several factors significantly influence what you'll pay for private health insurance on the Costa del Sol. Understanding these lets you budget accurately before committing to a move.

Key factors that affect your premium

  • Pre-existing conditions: Diabetes, heart conditions, previous cancers, and chronic conditions can increase premiums by 30–80% or result in exclusion periods (typically 6–24 months). Spanish insurers generally apply a período de carencia (waiting period) for specific treatments.
  • Co-payment structure: Policies with co-pays (con copagos) are significantly cheaper — often 25–40% less than equivalent no-co-pay policies. A typical co-pay might be €5–€15 per GP visit or €15–€30 per specialist visit.
  • Dental and optical: Adding comprehensive dental cover can increase your premium by €15–€30/month. Basic dental (check-ups, extractions) is often included in mid-range policies.
  • Excess/deductible: Some international policies offer annual deductibles of €500–€2,000 in exchange for lower premiums — worth considering if you're generally healthy.
  • Maximum entry age: Most Spanish insurers cap new enrolments at age 65–70 for domestic policies. If you're moving to Spain later in life, apply for insurance before your move to secure cover. Switching insurers after 70 is extremely difficult.
Expert Insight: Many UK expats on the Costa del Sol combine an S1 registration (for free public healthcare) with a mid-range private policy (€100–€180/month). This gives you the safety net of the public system for emergencies and major treatments, plus fast-track private access for routine appointments and diagnostics. It's the most cost-effective approach for retirees, and for a couple in their mid-sixties, total annual private insurance costs typically run to €3,600–€5,500.

When calculating your total cost of living in Spain, don't forget to factor healthcare into the equation alongside property costs, taxes, and community fees. Our cost calculator helps you model the full financial picture, including IBI, comunidad charges, and ongoing living expenses.

Public vs Private: A Side-by-Side Comparison for Everyday Medical Needs

For UK buyers weighing up their healthcare options on the Costa del Sol, here's a practical comparison of how the two systems perform for the situations you're most likely to encounter:

ScenarioPublic (SAS)Private
GP appointmentSame-day or next-day at your centro de salud. May be in Spanish only.Within 24–48 hours. English-speaking doctors widely available.
Specialist referralWaiting times of 30–120 days. No choice of specialist.Typically 3–10 days. Choose your specialist.
Diagnostic imaging (MRI/CT)Waiting times of 30–90 days for non-urgent scans.Usually within 1–5 days.
Emergency (A&E)Excellent. Major trauma centres in Málaga and Marbella. Free.Good private A&E departments. Covered by insurance.
Surgery (elective)Waiting lists of 60–180+ days depending on procedure.Scheduled within 2–4 weeks typically.
PrescriptionsSubsidised: retirees pay 10% (capped at €8.23/month in 2026). Workers pay 40–60%.Usually not covered or partially covered. Paid at pharmacy.
Maternity careFully covered. Excellent standard. Limited birth plan flexibility.Fully covered on comprehensive policies. Greater choice of hospital and obstetrician.
DentalExtremely limited: extractions and emergency care only.Basic to comprehensive depending on policy.
Mental healthAvailable but severely overstretched. Long waits.Good access. Sessions typically €50–€90 privately or included in policy.
CostFree via S1 or social security contributions. Convenio Especial: €60–€157/month.€45–€550/month depending on age and cover level.

For most UK expats on the Costa del Sol, the pragmatic answer is both. Use the public system as your foundation — especially for emergencies, chronic disease management, and prescriptions — and layer private cover on top for speed, convenience, and language comfort.

Registering with the Spanish Health System: The Step-by-Step Process

Registering for public healthcare in Andalucía involves several bureaucratic steps. Complete them in order to avoid delays and wasted trips.

Step 1: Obtain your NIE and residency

You cannot register for public healthcare without a valid NIE (Número de Identidad de Extranjero) and proof of legal residency. If you're purchasing property on the Costa del Sol, you'll obtain your NIE early in the buying process — it's required for the escritura (title deed) and all tax registrations. See our buying process guide for the full timeline.

Step 2: Register on the padrón

Visit your local town hall (ayuntamiento) in Marbella, Estepona, Fuengirola, or whichever municipality your property is in, and register on the padrón (municipal register). You'll need your passport, NIE, and proof of address (your rental contract or escritura). The certificado de empadronamiento you receive is required for healthcare registration and many other administrative processes in Spain.

Step 3: Establish your right to healthcare

This depends on your situation:

  1. Employed or self-employed: Your employer registers you with social security, or you register as autónomo — healthcare entitlement is automatic.
  2. UK State Pension recipient with S1: Take your S1 form to the local INSS (Instituto Nacional de la Seguridad Social) office. They'll process your entitlement and issue you a social security number.
  3. Convenio Especial: If you don't qualify through work or an S1, apply at the INSS to join the Convenio Especial. You'll need your NIE, padrón certificate, passport, and proof that you've been registered on the padrón for at least 90 days.

Step 4: Register at your centro de salud

Once you have your social security number and healthcare entitlement confirmed, visit your assigned centro de salud with your documentation. You'll be registered with a GP and issued a tarjeta sanitaria (health card). This card is your key to accessing the entire public system. The centro de salud assigned to you is based on your registered address on the padrón.

Step 5: Download the ClicSalud+ app

Andalucía's ClicSalud+ digital health app lets you book GP appointments, view test results, access your medical records, and request prescription renewals — all online. Registration requires your tarjeta sanitaria number and a Spanish mobile number. It's available in Spanish, and an English interface is expected to roll out progressively during 2026.

The Best Private Hospitals and Clinics on the Costa del Sol

The Costa del Sol has an exceptional concentration of private healthcare facilities, many specifically geared towards international patients. Here are the standout options across the coast:

Marbella and the Golden Mile

  • Hospital Quirónsalud Marbella: Part of Spain's largest private hospital group. Full-service hospital with 24-hour A&E, advanced diagnostics, surgical suites, and a dedicated international patient department with English-speaking coordinators. Located on the Marbella–Istán road.
  • HC Marbella International Hospital: A boutique international hospital with an outstanding oncology unit, cardiology department, and aesthetic medicine division. English is the default working language for many departments.

Málaga

  • Hospital Vithas Málaga: One of the coast's most comprehensive private hospitals with over 30 medical specialties. Strong neurology and cardiology departments.
  • Hospital Quirónsalud Málaga: Full-service private hospital with excellent maternity and paediatric units. Close to Málaga airport.

Benalmádena, Fuengirola, and Mijas

  • Clínica Santa Elena (Torremolinos/Benalmádena): Well-established private clinic popular with Scandinavian and British expats. English-speaking staff across most departments.
  • Hospiten Estepona: Part of the Hospiten group with a strong reputation for orthopaedics and general surgery. Serves the western Costa del Sol including Estepona and Manilva.

Specialist clinics worth knowing

  • Ochoa Dental Clinics (multiple locations): Highly rated dental chain with locations in Marbella, Fuengirola, and Málaga. English-speaking dentists.
  • Vitaldent and Sanitas Dental: Affordable dental clinic chains with branches across the coast.
  • Clínica Buchinger Wilhelmi (Marbella): A world-renowned integrative medicine and fasting clinic — premium end of the spectrum.

When choosing between property locations on the Costa del Sol, proximity to quality healthcare facilities is a factor worth weighing — particularly for retirees. Areas like Marbella, Benalmádena, and Fuengirola offer the densest concentration of private medical services, while towns like Nerja on the eastern coast are further from major private hospitals but still well served by the public system.

Planning Your Healthcare Before You Move: A Practical Checklist

Getting your healthcare arrangements right before you arrive on the Costa del Sol eliminates one of the biggest sources of anxiety for UK expats. Use this checklist to ensure nothing is overlooked:

6+ months before your move

  • Request a full copy of your UK medical records from your NHS GP. Ask for a printed summary including diagnoses, medications, allergies, surgical history, and recent test results. Many Spanish doctors — public and private — will want to see these.
  • Obtain a GHIC for interim coverage during travel and your initial settling-in period. Apply free at nhs.uk.
  • If eligible, apply for your S1 form from the NHS Overseas Healthcare Services team. Processing takes 4–8 weeks and can be done before you leave the UK.
  • Research private health insurance options. Get quotes from at least three Spanish insurers. If you're over 65, apply before your move — some policies have age limits on new enrolments.
  • Stockpile prescription medications. Ask your UK GP for a 90-day supply of any regular prescriptions. Bring the generic drug names (not just brand names) as these may differ in Spain.

In your first month in Spain

  • Register on the padrón at your local ayuntamiento.
  • Activate your health insurance policy or begin the Convenio Especial application.
  • Register your S1 at the INSS if applicable.
  • Register at your local centro de salud and obtain your tarjeta sanitaria.
  • Identify your nearest private hospital and A&E department. Save the address and phone number in your phone. In an emergency, the national number is 112.

Ongoing

  • Review your insurance policy annually. Premiums typically increase 3–8% per year. Compare quotes before automatically renewing.
  • Keep your padrón registration current. If you move property — whether from Benahavís to Mijas or within the same municipality — update your padrón and centro de salud registration.
  • Stay aware of Convenio Especial price changes. The Spanish government reviews contributions annually.
  • Ensure your S1 remains active. It must be renewed if your UK benefit status changes.

Healthcare is one of the most important practical considerations when buying property on the Costa del Sol — and getting it right gives you genuine peace of mind. If you're in the early stages of planning your move, explore our costs and taxes guide to understand the full financial picture, and use our cost calculator to model your total monthly outgoings, from IBI and comunidad fees to insurance and living expenses.

The Costa del Sol offers a healthcare standard that equals — and in many respects surpasses — what you're accustomed to in the UK. The key is preparation. Arrive with your paperwork in order, your insurance secured, and your medical records in hand, and you'll find that accessing excellent medical care in the Spanish sunshine is far simpler than you might expect.

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Disclaimer

This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Property laws and tax regulations change frequently — always consult a qualified Spanish lawyer and tax advisor before making any property purchase decisions. Data sourced from Spanish Land Registry, Idealista, and MUNDO partner network. Last verified: June 2026.

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