Health insurance for non lucrative visa Spain is one of the most important requirements to get right when applying for residency.

What Kind of Health Insurance Qualifies for Spain’s Non-Lucrative Visa?


If you are considering a move to Spain under the Non-Lucrative Visa, health insurance is one of the requirements that deserves close attention from the outset. It is not simply a formality tucked away in the paperwork. In many cases, the policy you choose can shape the success of the application itself. For anyone still comparing residency routes, our guide to Spain visa options is a useful place to begin.

A retired couple apply for health insurance for the non-lucrative visa in Spain

Health insurance is a core requirement for Spain’s Non-Lucrative Visa application.

The Non-Lucrative Visa, often described as Spain’s retirement visa, remains one of the main residence routes for non-EU nationals who want to spend meaningful time in Spain without taking up employment here. It is especially relevant for retirees, second-home owners and lifestyle buyers planning a longer-term move to Benahavís, Marbella and the wider Costa del Sol.

Why health insurance matters for the Non-Lucrative Visa

Spain’s public healthcare system is excellent, but access is tied to the social security system. Because the Non-Lucrative Visa does not permit you to work in Spain, or remotely for an overseas employer under the normal NLV rules, the authorities want reassurance that you will not become dependent on public healthcare after arrival.

That is why private health insurance is not an afterthought. It sits alongside proof of financial means, background checks and the other core requirements of the application. If you are preparing the wider residency process at the same time, you may also find our guide to residency and NIE essentials helpful.

Not every policy will be accepted

This is where many applicants encounter confusion. A general international policy, or travel insurance with some healthcare cover attached, may sound reassuring on paper, but it is usually not enough for Spain’s Non-Lucrative Visa.

The policy must be comprehensive private health insurance issued by an insurer authorised to operate in Spain. It must provide real medical cover rather than temporary travel protection, and it should offer a level of access comparable to Spain’s public healthcare system. A similar principle also applies to Spain’s Digital Nomad Visa, although in some cases health cover may be evidenced differently where there is an applicable social security arrangement in place.

What the policy needs to include

For the Non-Lucrative Visa, the cover should normally run for a full year, matching the length of the initial visa. It should apply to all beneficiaries included in the application and be written without the gaps that are common in many standard private policies.

In practical terms, this means no co-payments, no deductibles, no serious limits on essential treatment and, ideally, no waiting periods for core services. When reviewing Spanish policies, two expressions are especially important: sin copagos and sin carencias. These indicate that the policy is structured without co-payments and without waiting periods, both of which are central to what Spanish consulates typically expect.

The cover should extend across primary care, specialist consultations, hospital treatment, surgery, diagnostic testing and out-of-hospital care. In short, it needs to feel like proper healthcare, not emergency assistance dressed up as a medical policy.

Spain non-lucrative visa health insurance documents on table with coastal backdrop

A common source of confusion for applicants

One reason this requirement causes so much uncertainty is that insurers often offer several tiers of cover. Some are designed for residents and visa applicants. Others are lighter products with co-payments, exclusions or waiting periods built in. They may sound similar in conversation, but they are not treated equally for immigration purposes.

That is why it is wise to tell the insurer from the start that you are applying for Spain’s Non-Lucrative Visa. Most established providers understand the process and can point you toward the plans most commonly used for residency applications. Among the best-known names are Sanitas, Adeslas, Asisa, ASSSA and DKV. Each offers different levels of cover, so it is the policy wording, not simply the brand name, that matters most.

Pre-existing conditions and older applicants

For older applicants, or those with a more complex medical history, the process can become more nuanced. Insurers will usually ask for details of current health issues, previous diagnoses, operations and medication. In some cases, a doctor will review the file or request a call before deciding what terms can be offered.

Some applicants are accepted smoothly. Others may be offered a policy with exclusions for certain conditions or areas of treatment. Whether that is acceptable for visa purposes can depend on the individual case and on how the application is assessed. For that reason, arranging cover early is often the more comfortable approach.

What private health insurance typically costs

Premiums vary according to age, health profile and insurer, but many applicants find the cost relatively manageable by international standards. Younger applicants may find policies at the lower end of the range, while those of retirement age will typically pay more for full cover.

As a broad guide, monthly premiums often sit somewhere between around €50 and €160, with older applicants generally toward the upper end of that range. It is also common for consulates to ask for proof that the first year has been paid in full, rather than simply arranged by monthly instalments. That helps demonstrate the insurance will remain active for the whole initial visa period.

For buyers planning a longer relocation rather than only the visa process, it is often sensible to think about healthcare alongside the practicalities of the move itself, from residency paperwork to legal costs and ownership planning. Our articles on the buying process in Spain and purchase costs in Andalucía can help place those decisions in a broader context.

Why this detail deserves proper attention

For many people planning a move to Spain, health insurance feels like a technical requirement hidden inside a much bigger lifestyle decision. Yet it is one of the points where precision matters most. A policy that appears perfectly reasonable at first glance may still fall short of what the authorities expect.

Choosing the right cover from the outset can make the application process far more straightforward. More importantly, it gives you confidence as you prepare for a new chapter in Spain, whether that means retirement in the sun, more time with family, or a slower and more rewarding way of living on the Costa del Sol.

At Benahavís Collection, we always recommend confirming the latest visa and insurance requirements with your consulate, immigration adviser or legal representative before submitting an application, as interpretation can vary slightly depending on the route and the applicant’s circumstances.

Health insurance for non lucrative visa Spain