RepatriationSanitas add-onQuote-based

Repatriation Cover in Spain

Repatriation cover helps with the cost and arrangements of bringing someone home — either medical repatriation (being transported home for treatment or recovery) or repatriation of mortal remains (returning a body or ashes to the home country). For expats and foreign residents in Spain it is a common worry, and in many cases repatriation can be added to or included with a Sanitas policy, depending on the plan and policy terms. Ask us and we will check the options and get you a quote.

Medical repatriation & repatriation of remainsCan be added to a Sanitas policy where availableOptions explained in plain EnglishPersonalised quoteSubject to policy termsEnglish-speaking advisers
Repatriation CoverAsk us
Medical repatriationSubject to assessment
Repatriation of remainsBody or ashes
Sanitas add-onWhere available
Limits & termsDepend on plan
Family abroadReassurance
Flat guarantee?No — subject to terms
Ask About Repatriation →
Medical & remains repatriation
Sanitas add-on where available
Subject to policy terms
Family abroad reassured
English-speaking advisers

Repatriation explained

What Is Repatriation Cover?

Repatriation cover is about getting someone home. For expats and foreign residents in Spain, that can mean two different things: medical repatriation (being transported home for treatment or recovery while you are alive) and repatriation of mortal remains (returning a body or ashes to the home country after death). Repatriation cover helps with the cost, the logistics and the paperwork of either — and with the worry that comes with being far from home.

  • Transport home for medical treatment or recovery
  • Returning a body to the home country
  • Returning ashes after cremation
  • Coordinating the arrangements and paperwork
  • Support for family members at a difficult time
  • Liaison between Spain and the home country
In many cases repatriation can be added to or included with a Sanitas policy, depending on the plan and policy terms. WhatsApp an adviser or ask for a quote and we will check the options.

Two types

Medical Repatriation vs Repatriation of Remains

It helps to be clear about the two kinds of repatriation, because they are covered in different ways:

Medical Repatriation

Transport home for treatment or recovery while you are alive, when it is clinically appropriate. This is usually handled within private health insurance and depends on a medical assessment.

  • Medical transport home when clinically appropriate
  • Coordination with treating doctors in Spain
  • Arranging suitable transport (subject to medical assessment)
  • Support for accompanying family where applicable

Repatriation of Mortal Remains

Returning a body or ashes to the home country after death. This is usually covered through funeral (decesos) cover or a repatriation add-on, and includes coordinating documentation and transport.

  • Return of a body to the home country
  • Return of ashes after cremation
  • Coordination of documentation and transport
  • Liaison with funeral directors in Spain and abroad

Who it's for

Who Needs Repatriation Cover in Spain?

Repatriation cover is popular with people whose life is in Spain but whose roots — and often family — are somewhere else. It is worth considering if you are:

  • Expats and foreign residents living in Spain
  • Retirees who want their family abroad reassured
  • People whose family is in another country
  • Non-EU and EU nationals alike
  • Anyone who wants the home-country journey covered
  • Families who want one less thing to worry about

How cover works

How Repatriation Can Be Added to a Sanitas Policy

Repatriation is not a one-size-fits-all benefit. Depending on the Sanitas plan, it may be included, available as an optional add-on, or provided as a complementary guarantee. We check what each option covers, the limits and any exclusions, and arrange a quote that fits your situation.

Tell us your situation

Whether you want medical repatriation, repatriation of remains, or both.

We check the options

We look at which Sanitas plans include or can add repatriation cover.

Review the terms

We explain what is included, the limits and any exclusions in plain English.

Get a quote

We arrange a personalised quote for cover that fits your needs.

Add it to your policy

Repatriation can be set up as part of your Sanitas cover where available.

Keep the details handy

So your family knows what to do and who to contact if needed.

Important

What Repatriation Cover May Not Automatically Include

So there are no surprises, it is important to understand the limits. Repatriation cover is provided as support, subject to policy terms — never as a flat guarantee:

  • Repatriation is not automatically included on every plan
  • Cover and limits depend on the policy and plan level
  • Some routes are optional add-ons or complementary guarantees
  • Medical repatriation depends on a medical assessment
  • Terms, limits and exclusions always apply
  • Always confirm what your policy includes before relying on it
Repatriation is offered as an option or benefit subject to the policy terms, limits and exclusions — always confirm what your specific policy includes before relying on it.

Compare

Repatriation, Funeral Cover & Health Insurance

Repatriation overlaps with a few other products. Here is how they relate:

Cover typeWhat it focuses onHow it is usually provided
Medical repatriationTransport home for treatment / recoveryWithin private health insurance, subject to medical assessment
Repatriation of remainsReturning a body or ashes homeFuneral / decesos cover or a repatriation add-on
Funeral cover (decesos)Funeral service in Spain + repatriation optionsA separate funeral insurance product
Travel insuranceShort trips / emergencies abroadNot designed for living in Spain long-term

For repatriation specifically within private health insurance and visa documents, see repatriation & health insurance in Spain. For funeral services in Spain, see funeral insurance in Spain.

Get help

Get Help Arranging Repatriation Cover

Spanish Health Insurance helps English-speaking expats, residents and families in Spain understand repatriation cover and arrange it through Sanitas where available. Whether you want medical repatriation, repatriation of remains, or both, we can check the options, explain the terms in plain English and get you a quote.

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Repatriation in Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum

For Spanish visa and residency applicants, the good news is that repatriation is included in the Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum visa plans, and is confirmed in the visa certificate. On these plans it appears as repatriation together with a companion ticket, subject to the policy terms and conditions. This is part of why they suit NLV and DNV applicants, where repatriation is commonly expected in the cover.

Repatriation on the visa plans is built in rather than an optional extra, which keeps the certificate straightforward for your application. Broader or standalone repatriation needs — for example for people who are not on a visa plan — can be more involved and depend on the specific product and wording, which we explain below.

Repatriation Is Part of the Visa Health-Insurance Requirement

For several Spanish residence routes, repatriation is part of what the health insurance is expected to provide. It is one of the elements that distinguishes a comprehensive visa-suitable policy from basic cover, alongside no copayments and no waiting periods for the visa option. Because the Residents plans include it and confirm it in the certificate, applicants do not usually need to arrange it separately.

Requirements vary by route and consulate, so always confirm the current requirements for your application. We make sure the cover and certificate reflect what your route expects, including repatriation where required. See visa-compliant cover.

Medical Repatriation vs Repatriation of Remains

Repatriation can mean two different things. Medical repatriation is being brought home for medical reasons in certain serious situations. Repatriation of remains is the return of a person who has died to their country of origin. The two are handled differently, and what is provided depends on the specific product and the policy wording.

On the Sanitas visa plans, repatriation is included as described in the policy and certificate, subject to the terms. For broader or standalone repatriation-of-remains needs outside a visa plan, the arrangement is different — see our health-insurance repatriation guide and, for funeral-specific cover, funeral insurance.

Repatriation Is Not the Same as Travel Insurance

It is important not to confuse repatriation cover within a health insurance policy with travel insurance. Travel insurance covers trips and may include its own repatriation element for a journey; a Spanish residence health policy includes repatriation as part of living-in-Spain cover, confirmed in the visa certificate. For a visa application, travel insurance is generally not accepted as the health-insurance proof.

So repatriation being in your Sanitas visa policy is part of your residence cover, not a substitute for, or the same as, a travel policy. If you also travel, travel insurance is a separate consideration.

Repatriation in the Certificate and Documentation

Where repatriation is required for a visa, it should appear clearly in the certificate or policy documentation you submit. On the Sanitas Residents plans the certificate confirms repatriation along with the other key details (no copayments, no waiting periods for the visa option, validity dates). A quote or receipt is not the same as a certificate. See the visa certificate explained.

We make sure the certificate reflects the repatriation cover where your route requires it. We never promise a particular certificate format will be accepted by every office — the authority makes the final decision.

What Repatriation Cover Does Not Do

Repatriation cover does not guarantee the visa outcome. Having repatriation in your policy helps meet the health-insurance requirement, but the visa or residency decision is made by the Spanish authorities and depends on your full file. Repatriation is also an assistance benefit subject to limits, conditions and authorisation in the policy wording — it is not an open-ended guarantee.

As with all benefits, the binding detail is the official policy wording. We explain what the repatriation element does and does not cover so you have realistic expectations, rather than assuming.

Repatriation for NLV and DNV Applicants

For Non-Lucrative Visa applicants, repatriation is commonly expected in the cover, and the Sanitas Residents plans include it and confirm it in the certificate — so it is usually handled automatically by choosing a suitable plan. The same applies to Digital Nomad Visa applicants using a Residents or Residents Platinum policy.

For NLV and DNV applicants the practical point is simple: choosing Sanitas Residents or Residents Platinum means repatriation is included and certified, without arranging anything separately. We confirm it is reflected correctly for your route.

Repatriation for Students and Families

Student-visa applicants should check whether repatriation is required for their route and that their cover reflects it; see student visa health insurance. For families applying together, each member needs suitable cover, and where repatriation is required it should apply to each person named on the certificate.

We coordinate cover for students and families so that, where repatriation is required, it is included and certified for everyone in the application. See family health insurance.

How to Check Repatriation Is in Your Cover

  • Confirm the plan includes repatriation (the Sanitas Residents plans do)
  • Check it is stated in the certificate you will submit
  • Understand it is subject to the policy limits, conditions and authorisation
  • Confirm the requirement for your specific route and consulate
  • Remember travel insurance is not the same and is generally not accepted

If you are unsure whether your cover includes repatriation as your route requires, ask us and we will check the policy wording and certificate with you.

How We Help With Repatriation Cover

We help English-speaking applicants choose a Sanitas plan that includes repatriation where the route requires it, confirm it is reflected in the certificate, and explain honestly what the benefit does and does not cover. For broader repatriation needs outside a visa plan, we point you to the right option.

Tell us your route and situation and we will recommend a suitable plan and prepare a personalised quote. Get a quote or contact an adviser. Visa and residency decisions rest with the Spanish authorities and depend on your full file.

Why Repatriation Is Valued by Expats

For many people moving to Spain, repatriation is one of the more reassuring parts of a comprehensive policy. Living far from your home country, the idea that there is provision — in the serious situations the policy covers — to be brought home, or for remains to be returned, removes a worry that sits in the background of any international move. It is part of why repatriation features in the visa health-insurance requirement at all.

It is worth keeping it in proportion, though: repatriation is one assistance element of a much wider policy whose main job is your everyday healthcare in Spain. It is valuable, but it is not the headline benefit you will use day to day, and it operates within the limits and conditions set out in the policy wording.

Repatriation for Couples, Families and Older Applicants

Where a policy covers a couple or a family, repatriation, where included, generally applies to each insured person named on the policy — so it is not only the main applicant who is covered. For families applying for a visa together, this is one more reason to make sure every member is properly insured and named on the certificate, rather than relying on a single policyholder.

Older applicants and retirees often place particular value on repatriation, and the Sanitas Residents plans (available up to age 75) include it and confirm it in the certificate. As always, acceptance and the exact terms depend on the individual case and the policy wording, which we check with you.

How Repatriation Fits With the Rest of Your Cover

Repatriation sits alongside the core of a Sanitas visa policy — comprehensive no-copay healthcare in Spain through the medical network, with no waiting periods for the visa option and a certificate once active. It is one of the elements that makes the cover suitable for a residence application, rather than a standalone product you buy on its own when it is part of a visa plan.

This is why, for most visa applicants, the simplest route is to choose a suitable plan (Sanitas Residents or Residents Platinum) that already includes repatriation and confirms it in the certificate, rather than trying to add it separately. We make sure the whole policy fits your route.

Repatriation and Spanish Visas: the Practical Summary

In short: repatriation is included in the Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum visa plans and confirmed in the certificate; it is part of what several Spanish visa routes expect from the health insurance; it is not the same as travel insurance; and it is an assistance benefit subject to limits and the policy wording, not a guarantee of any outcome — least of all the visa decision, which rests with the Spanish authorities.

For broader or standalone repatriation needs outside a visa plan, the arrangement is different and we point you to the right option. If you are unsure what your cover provides, ask us and we will check the policy wording and certificate with you in plain English.

About This Guide

How This Page Differs From Our Repatriation Health Insurance Guide

Repatriation can be an important policy or certificate feature where it is required, but the full health-insurance requirement depends on your visa route, the consulate or authority, and your full file. Travel insurance is not the same as visa-compliant private health insurance, and adding repatriation alone does not automatically make a policy suitable.

This page explains repatriation cover broadly — including medical repatriation and repatriation of remains or ashes. If you need private health insurance for a Spanish visa or residency certificate, start with our repatriation health insurance guide. If you already have a policy and want to know whether repatriation can be added, see our add-on guide.

Get a Repatriation Cover Quote

Tell us what you need and we will check which Sanitas options include or can add repatriation cover, explain the terms in plain English, and arrange a personalised quote. Acceptance and exact terms depend on the insurer's rules.

  • Medical repatriation & repatriation of remains
  • Sanitas add-on where available
  • Plain-English explanation of the terms
  • Family-abroad reassurance
  • Personalised quote
  • English-speaking advisers

Ask About Repatriation Cover

Your Details
People to Cover
Applicant 1 (You)
Your Situation

Want Repatriation Peace of Mind?

We'll check the Sanitas options and explain the terms — free, no-obligation advice from English-speaking advisers.

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FAQs

Repatriation Cover FAQs

Common questions about repatriation cover and Sanitas in Spain.

Repatriation cover helps with bringing someone home — either medical repatriation (transport home for treatment or recovery) or repatriation of mortal remains (returning a body or ashes to the home country).
Repatriation may be included or available as an add-on depending on the plan and policy terms — it is not automatic on every plan. Ask us and we will check what your policy includes or can add.
Medical repatriation is transport home while you are alive, for treatment or recovery; repatriation of remains is the return of a body or ashes to the home country after death.
In many cases, yes — repatriation can be set up as part of your Sanitas cover where available. We can confirm the options and get you a quote.
No. Funeral insurance (seguro de decesos) covers a funeral service in Spain and may include repatriation options. Repatriation cover focuses on bringing someone home. They can work together.
It depends on the plan, the type of repatriation and your circumstances. We arrange a personalised quote — ask us and we will check the options.
Medical repatriation depends on a medical assessment of whether transport is clinically appropriate and safe. It is provided as support, subject to policy terms, not as a flat guarantee.
No — both EU and non-EU residents in Spain often want repatriation cover for peace of mind, whatever their nationality.
Some policies include support for accompanying family members where applicable, but this varies by plan — always check the terms.
Yes. We can check which Sanitas options include or can add repatriation cover, explain the terms in English and get you a quote. Acceptance and exact terms depend on the insurer's rules.