Not sure which plan is right for you? We'll compare them all and find the best fit.
Get a Quote →Need a visa-approved policy fast? We can have your certificate ready the same day.
Get a Quote →Looking for a business or group quote? Our advisors will compare all options for you.
Get a Quote →Ready to find the right plan? Get an exact price in minutes.
Get a Quote →Your Spanish visa health insurance is normally arranged before the visa is granted and is usually an annual 12-month private health insurance policy. After you arrive in Spain, the safest approach is normally to keep that policy active and avoid gaps, especially while completing TIE / residency-card steps or early residency requirements.
Overview
After a visa is approved there are usually further residency steps in Spain, such as the TIE (residency card). Your visa health insurance is normally an annual 12-month policy, and keeping it continuously active through these steps is generally important. Do not cancel cover as soon as the visa is stamped, and confirm the exact residency requirements with the relevant authority or a qualified immigration specialist.
For most non-EU visa routes, private health insurance is normally arranged before the visa is granted, because the insurance certificate forms part of the visa application. This page is about what happens after visa approval: keeping that policy active through arrival in Spain, the TIE / residency-card appointment and any early residency steps. This is not a separate TIE-only insurance product — it is the same annual private health insurance policy arranged for your visa or residency route. The TIE appointment simply makes it especially important not to cancel, downgrade or interrupt cover too early.
A visa being approved often feels like the finish line, but for most routes there are further steps in Spain — including obtaining the TIE, the residency card. Your private health insurance is usually expected to remain valid through this period, and letting it lapse too early can cause problems. This guide explains why continuous cover matters, how to keep your certificate and policy dates aligned, and what each route should watch for before the TIE.
Important: this is insurance guidance, not immigration legal advice. We help keep your cover in order; always confirm the exact TIE and residency requirements with the relevant Spanish authority or a qualified immigration specialist, as requirements can vary by region and office.
Steps
The typical sequence is: the visa is approved at the consulate, you travel to Spain, and then you complete in-country residency steps including the TIE. Each stage can involve proof of cover, so your policy is usually expected to be valid throughout — not just for the initial consulate appointment. Understanding this sequence is the key to not cancelling too early.
Why
A gap in cover during the residency process can cause problems if proof of insurance is requested at any stage. Keeping the policy continuously active removes that risk and keeps your file clean. Continuity is the safe default, and because Spanish private cover is an annual policy, keeping it active simply means not cancelling it prematurely.
Cancel
Dates
It helps to distinguish the certificate (the document proving cover) from the policy (the cover itself). Make sure both align with your timeline — the policy is active across the period you need, and the certificate reflects the right dates. A certificate is a snapshot proving the policy exists; the policy is the underlying annual cover. If a certificate is queried, see certificate rejected or queried.
Term
Spanish private health insurance is normally an annual 12-month policy. For visa and residency purposes this is exactly what you want: ongoing cover that remains valid through arrival, the TIE and into your first renewal. The start date can be timed to your move, and the policy then runs for the year — there is no need for a short-term product, and you should not cancel mid-term simply because the visa is approved. See temporary cover and first-year cover.
NLV
For the Non-Lucrative Visa, keep comprehensive no-copay cover active from your consulate certificate through arrival and the TIE, and into your first renewal. The NLV requires that level of cover, so keep it in place rather than downgrading or cancelling before the residency process is complete.
DNV
For the Digital Nomad Visa, keep suitable cover in place through the application and any in-Spain steps, including the TIE where applicable. The route depends on whether you are a foreign employee or self-employed, but in both cases continuity through the residency steps is the safe approach.
Student
For a student visa, keep cover aligned with your course and any residency-card steps, so there is no gap during the process. If your course continues, renew in good time so cover remains continuous.
Family
Each family member's cover should remain active through the residency steps. We quote and manage the household together so everyone's dates line up, and no member's cover lapses before the TIE is complete. See family health insurance.
Risks-table
| Stage | Insurance issue | Why it matters | Safer approach |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visa just approved | Tempted to cancel early | Cover may still be needed | Keep the policy active |
| Arrival in Spain | Gap before residency steps | Proof may be requested | Continuous cover from day one |
| Before the TIE | Certificate dates not aligned | Document may be questioned | Align certificate and policy dates |
| At renewal | Lapse during switch | Gap in the residency file | Time any switch with no gap |
| Switching insurer | Old policy cancelled too soon | Gap before new cover | New policy active before old ends |
Routes-table
| Route | Typical insurance position | What to avoid | Useful link |
|---|---|---|---|
| NLV | Comprehensive no-copay, kept active | Cancelling after visa approval | NLV health insurance |
| DNV | Suitable cover through in-Spain steps | A gap before the TIE | DNV health insurance |
| Student | Cover aligned to course dates | Letting cover lapse mid-course | Student visa cover |
| Family | Each member covered continuously | One member's cover lapsing | Family health insurance |
Check
Requirements can vary by region and office, so confirm with the relevant Extranjería office or a qualified immigration specialist what cover you need to show and when for the TIE. We make sure your insurance and certificate match whatever you are advised, but the residency requirements themselves are set by the authorities, not by us.
Guidance
We are English-speaking Sanitas specialists, not immigration lawyers. We can keep your cover continuous and your certificate correct, and explain how insurance fits the residency timeline, but we do not handle the visa or TIE application or give immigration legal advice. For the legal and procedural side, use a qualified immigration specialist; for the insurance side, we are here to help.
Avoid gaps
Plan your renewal and any switch so there is no gap before the TIE is complete. If you are switching insurer, time the new policy to start before the old one ends — see changing cover after moving. A gap, even a short one, is best avoided where cover is part of your residency file.
Renewal
Because the policy is annual, your first renewal may fall around or after the TIE stage. Keep cover continuous through that renewal so there is no break in the residency process, and review the plan at renewal if your needs have changed. See first-year cover and health insurance after arriving.
Queried
If an office queries the wording or dates on your certificate, it is usually a fixable document issue rather than a problem with the policy. We can arrange a corrected certificate that shows the right details and dates. See certificate rejected or queried.
How we help
We keep your cover continuous and the certificate dates aligned through the residency process, from the consulate certificate through arrival, the TIE and your first renewal. Tell us your route and dates and we will keep everything in order on the insurance side. Get a quote or contact us.
Step by step
Mapping the journey makes the insurance side clear. You arrange cover and obtain the certificate for your consulate appointment; the visa is approved; you travel to Spain with cover already active; you complete arrival steps and the TIE; and your policy continues into its first renewal. At no point in that sequence should the cover lapse where it supports your residency. Seen as one continuous line from consulate to TIE and beyond, the right approach is simply to keep the annual policy active throughout.
Proof
At different points you may be asked to show proof of cover — typically the certificate confirming the insured person, comprehensive cover valid in Spain, no co-payments where the route expects it, an insurer authorised in Spain, and the validity dates. Requirements can vary by office, so confirm exactly what is needed with the relevant authority. We make sure your certificate shows the right details, and we can reissue it if dates need updating. See certificate rejected or queried.
Renewals timing
Because the policy is annual, your first renewal may fall close to or after the TIE stage. Keep the cover continuous through that renewal so there is no break while the residency process is underway, and review the plan at renewal only once you are sure cover is no longer needed for an upcoming step. If you intend to switch insurer, time the new policy to start before the old one ends. See changing cover after moving.
Arrive first
It is normal to arrive in Spain and complete the TIE afterwards, sometimes weeks later. The important point is that your cover should already be active on arrival and should stay active through the TIE step. Arranging cover before you travel, with a start date timed to your arrival, is the simplest way to ensure there is no gap during this in-between period. See health insurance before arriving.
Mistakes
All of these are avoidable by keeping cover continuous and confirming requirements before changing anything.
NLV-DNV-detail
Keep comprehensive no-copay cover at the level the NLV requires through the TIE; do not downgrade mid-process.
Maintain suitable cover for the DNV route through any in-Spain steps, whether employee or self-employed.
Keep student cover aligned with the course and any residency-card steps, renewing if studies continue.
Families-detail
For families, each member's cover should remain active through the residency steps, and the certificate should reflect everyone who needs to be covered. We manage the household together so no member's cover lapses before the TIE is complete and the dates stay aligned across the family. See family health insurance.
Specialist
The TIE stage is exactly where small insurance mistakes — an early cancellation, a mismatched date, a downgrade — can cause friction. As English-speaking Sanitas specialists we keep your cover continuous, your certificate correct, and your dates aligned, and we reissue documents quickly if an office asks. We do not handle the visa or TIE application itself or give legal advice, but on the insurance side we make sure nothing trips you up.
Reassure
The simple rule through the whole residency process is: keep your annual cover active, keep the certificate correct, and confirm requirements with the authorities before changing anything. Do that and the insurance side of the TIE looks after itself. Tell us your route and dates and we will keep everything aligned — get a quote or contact us.
Costs
Some people cancel too early because they assume keeping cover through the TIE means paying for something they are not using. In practice, your annual policy is the cover you need for living in Spain anyway — it is not an extra cost layered on top, it is your residence health insurance doing its job through the residency process. Keeping it active simply means not interrupting the policy you would hold regardless. See first-year cover for how the annual term works.
Offices
Spain's residency processes are administered locally, so exactly what proof of cover you are asked for, and when, can vary by region and office. That is why we recommend confirming the specifics with the relevant Extranjería office or a qualified immigration specialist, and keeping cover continuous so you are ready whatever is asked. On the insurance side, we make sure your certificate is correct and can reissue it quickly if an office wants it presented differently.
Separate
Families do not always move or complete the TIE at the same time. Where members arrive or apply separately, we make sure each person's cover is active for their own timeline, with the certificate reflecting everyone who needs to be covered. The aim is that no member has a gap during their part of the residency process. See family health insurance.
Downgrade
As well as not cancelling, it is important not to downgrade below the level your route requires before the residency process is complete. For example, the NLV requires comprehensive no-copay cover, so switching to a lighter plan before the TIE could leave you without the required cover. Keep the appropriate level in place through the process, and review the plan only once you are sure a change will not affect a residency step.
Bottom
The simple rule through the whole residency process is: keep your annual cover active at the right level, keep the certificate correct and aligned, and confirm requirements with the authorities before changing anything. Do that and the insurance side of the TIE looks after itself, with no gaps and no surprises. We keep everything aligned on the insurance side while you complete the residency steps. Get a quote or contact us.
Important information
Tell us your route and dates and we will help keep your cover continuous through the residency steps. We help with the health-insurance part of your application. Acceptance and exact policy terms depend on the insurer’s rules; visa decisions rest with the Spanish authorities.
English-speaking Sanitas specialists can help with the health-insurance part of your visa or residency application.
FAQs
Common questions about this Spanish visa route and the health-insurance requirement. Always confirm current rules with the official authorities or a qualified immigration specialist.