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Get a Quote →If you are coming to Spain as an exchange student, you may need private health insurance for your student visa, study stay, university exchange, semester abroad or residence authorisation. Exchange students often need to check their insurance carefully because the correct policy can depend on nationality, length of stay, programme dates, university requirements and visa certificate wording. For eligible students aged 14 to 35 coming to Spain for 3 to 14 months, Sanitas International Students is usually the first option to check.
Do you need it
Many non-EU exchange students coming to Spain may need private health insurance if they are applying for a Spanish student visa or student residence authorisation. Health insurance is commonly requested because the student must normally show they have suitable healthcare access in Spain without relying on the Spanish public health system.
The policy usually needs to provide private medical cover in Spain, match the dates of the exchange or study stay, and include certificate wording suitable for the visa or residence file. In many cases, no-copayment private health insurance is requested.
The exact requirement can depend on nationality, exchange length, university requirements, where the student applies and the authority reviewing the file. Final acceptance always rests with the Spanish consulate, visa centre, immigration office or authority reviewing the application.
University rules
Exchange students may receive insurance guidance from their home university, host university, exchange provider or study-abroad office. This can be useful, but it does not always mean the policy is automatically suitable for a Spanish student visa or residence application.
Some university policies are designed for general study-abroad protection, travel emergencies or institutional requirements. They may not provide the same certificate wording, no-copayment structure, Spanish private medical cover or repatriation wording that may be requested for a Spanish student visa file. Before relying on a university or exchange policy, students should check whether it meets the Spanish application requirements and whether the certificate can be issued with the correct details.
Sanitas
For eligible students aged 14 to 35 coming to Spain for a study stay from 3 to 14 months, Sanitas International Students is usually the first option to check. If the student is over 35, staying longer, applying under a different route, or has unusual certificate requirements, alternative Sanitas options may need to be reviewed, subject to current terms and eligibility.
It is designed for international students and normally includes no copayments, no waiting periods, medical cover in Spain and repatriation, subject to current Sanitas International Students terms and eligibility rules. This can make it a strong option for exchange students who need private health insurance for a student visa, study stay or residence authorisation. Before arranging the policy, the student's age, nationality, exchange dates, arrival date, Spanish city, host institution, visa route and certificate requirements should all be checked.
Semester abroad
Many exchange students come to Spain for one semester, one academic term or one full academic year. These students may be attending a Spanish university, language programme, business school, art school, hospitality school or specialist academic programme.
For semester-abroad students, the policy dates are especially important. The insurance should normally match the expected stay, visa dates and course period as closely as possible. If the policy starts too late or ends before the study period is complete, the application may be questioned. Sanitas International Students may be suitable for many eligible students whose exchange stay falls between 3 and 14 months.
Non-EU
For students from countries such as the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, China, India, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, South Africa or other non-EU countries, private health insurance may be an important part of the Spanish student visa process.
The student's home-country healthcare, travel insurance or university cover may not automatically satisfy the Spanish requirement. A Spanish private health insurance policy from a recognised Spanish insurer can often be a clearer and safer option when a visa certificate is needed. See health insurance for non-EU students.
EU
EU exchange students are usually in a different position from non-EU students. Many EU students may be able to use an EHIC or equivalent public healthcare arrangement for necessary state healthcare during a temporary stay in Spain.
However, EHIC access is not the same as private health insurance. EU students may still choose private Sanitas cover for easier access to private doctors, specialists, diagnostic tests and hospitals within the Sanitas medical network. Some universities or programmes may also ask for proof of insurance or recommend additional private cover. EU students should check whether they need private cover for the university, programme provider or personal healthcare preference, rather than assuming the same student visa rules apply. See health insurance for EU students.
Travel insurance
Travel insurance is usually not the same as private medical insurance for a Spanish student visa or residence application. It may be useful for luggage, cancellations, short trips or emergency medical situations, but many travel policies are not designed for an academic stay in Spain.
Travel insurance may include emergency-only cover, reimbursement-based claims, deductibles, exclusions, maximum trip lengths or short-stay limits. It may also fail to provide the Spanish student visa certificate wording, no-copayment structure or repatriation wording required for the application. For many non-EU exchange students, Spanish private health insurance is the clearer option.
Home cover
Some exchange students already have public healthcare, private medical insurance, university insurance or family health insurance in their home country. This may be useful in some circumstances, but it may not provide the right structure for Spain.
The issue is not only whether the student has some type of healthcare cover. The important question is whether the policy provides suitable cover in Spain and whether it can issue a certificate that meets the student visa or residence requirements. If the certificate does not clearly show private medical cover in Spain, no-copayment wording where required, suitable policy dates and any required repatriation wording, the application may be delayed or questioned.
No-copay
For many student visa applications, no-copayment private health insurance may be required or expected. In Spanish, this is often referred to as sin copago. No-copayment cover means the student does not normally pay an additional fee each time they use covered medical services within the policy conditions and network.
This can be important because the reviewing authority may want evidence that the student has suitable private healthcare access in Spain without additional usage charges for covered services. A cheaper policy with copayments may not be suitable if the application route requires no-copayment cover. See no-copayment student visa health insurance.
Certificate
The health insurance certificate is often a key document for a student visa or residence file. It should normally show the insured student's name, insurer details, policy start date, type of cover, medical cover in Spain and any wording required for the application route.
For exchange students, the certificate should be checked against the official exchange dates and expected arrival date. If the certificate uses the wrong name, starts too late, does not show no-copayment cover where required, or does not match the application route, the student may be asked for further documentation. Final acceptance always rests with the Spanish consulate, visa centre, immigration office or authority reviewing the file.
3–14 months
Sanitas International Students is usually the first option to check for eligible students aged 14 to 35 coming to Spain for a study stay from 3 to 14 months. This may fit many semester-abroad programmes, academic-year exchanges, university exchange routes, language exchanges, business school exchange terms and study-abroad programmes.
If the exchange is shorter than 3 months, longer than 14 months, or part of a different residence route, another insurance option may need to be reviewed.
Over 35 / longer
Most exchange students are under 35, but some postgraduate, professional, research or executive exchange routes may involve older applicants. If the student is over 35, Sanitas International Students may not be the correct option. Depending on the case, alternatives may include Sanitas Residents, Residents Platinum, Sanitas Más Salud, Sanitas Único or another Sanitas private health insurance option.
Some exchange or study routes may also extend beyond 14 months, especially where the student remains in Spain for a longer academic programme, placement, renewal, extension or second course. If the stay is longer than the Sanitas International Students duration, another Sanitas policy may need to be reviewed to make sure the student has suitable private medical cover and documentation for the full route.
Medical history
Exchange students with ongoing medication, previous treatment, surgery, chronic conditions, recent investigations or medical history should declare this where requested. Having a medical condition does not automatically mean the student cannot get insurance. However, Sanitas may need to review the case, request more information, apply exclusions or special terms, or decline the application depending on the condition, policy and health declaration.
Incorrect or incomplete declarations may cause problems later with claims, cover or policy validity, so health questions should be answered accurately.
Cities
Exchange students study across Spain, especially in Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Seville, Granada, Salamanca, Málaga, Alicante, Bilbao and other university or language-study cities. Madrid and Barcelona are often popular for universities, business schools and international programmes. Valencia, Granada, Salamanca, Seville and Málaga are popular for student life, language learning, culture and lifestyle.
Before choosing a policy, it is sensible to check local Sanitas medical access in the city where the student will live, including general doctors, specialists, diagnostic centres, hospitals, emergency care and the cuadro médico in the local area.
Checklist
Before arranging health insurance for an exchange programme in Spain, check:
Helpful links
Continue with the pages most relevant to your student insurance route:
Important information
Tell us the student's age, nationality, exchange dates, Spanish city, host institution, visa route and any medical history, and we will help compare the suitable Sanitas options. For eligible exchange students aged 14 to 35 coming to Spain for 3 to 14 months, Sanitas International Students is usually the first option to check. Not sure whether your current travel, university exchange, home-country or international cover is enough? Send us the details and we’ll help you check whether a Spanish private policy is the safer option. Please check the actual current policy terms and your personal conditions before purchasing or using any Sanitas policy. Policies change and individual terms can vary.
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FAQs
Common questions about health insurance for exchange and semester-abroad students in Spain. EU and non-EU students differ — always confirm for your case.