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Get a Quote →When a family registers in Spain, each member’s situation can be different — one partner may work and have public healthcare, another may be economically inactive, children may be dependants, and a spouse may be non-EU. This guide explains who needs cover, how EU and non-EU family members differ, and which Sanitas options fit (usually Más Salud Familias rather than the visa products), with English-speaking help throughout.
Who needs it
It depends on each person’s situation rather than on the family as a single block. A working EU member may have public healthcare through social security; an economically inactive partner may need private cover; children may be dependants; and a non-EU family member may be on a different route entirely. The table shows how it tends to work:
| Family situation | Private insurance position | Sanitas route to consider |
|---|---|---|
| EU citizen working in Spain, with spouse / children | Public healthcare may apply via social security | Private Sanitas optional |
| Economically inactive EU family applying for CUE | Private cover often needed | Más Salud Familias Sin Copago |
| EU retiree with S1 and dependants | S1 may cover certain family members | Check entitlement first |
| EU citizen + non-EU spouse | Different residency / healthcare rules may apply | Case by case |
| Children / dependants | May need to be covered or named where private cover is used | Family policy or individual cover |
| Family already resident with public healthcare | Private Sanitas may be an upgrade | Más Salud / Único / family options |
EU vs non-EU
This is the key section, because an EU family member and a non-EU family member may not follow the same process. An EU spouse or child registers through the green certificate (CUE) route like any EU citizen, and whether they need private cover depends on their own status — working, economically inactive, student and so on.
A non-EU spouse or child of an EU citizen is different. They may qualify under a family-member-of-an-EU-citizen route, which is its own process and not the same as a third-country visa applied for at a consulate. Healthcare proof requirements can depend on the exact application and office, so it should be checked carefully. Do not assume the EU member’s arrangements automatically cover a non-EU family member.
Because of this split, mixed families often need each person assessed separately, and the non-EU member may sometimes sit closer to the third-country route. See our EU citizens hub, third-country nationals hub, non-EU families guide and EU residency certificate page.
Children
Children are assessed individually, just like adults. Younger children will need a paediatrician; school-age children and teenagers mainly need GP and specialist access; and dependants over 18 (for example a student) may be included depending on the policy rules and should be checked. Where private cover is used for the CUE or a residence process, children may need to be named in the documentation.
It is worth confirming local paediatric access in your area, and checking children’s dental needs separately, since dental is usually a distinct element. Our Sanitas medical network guide explains how to check.
EHIC / GHIC
The EHIC (or UK GHIC) is designed for temporary stays and medically necessary treatment during visits. It is not normally a full substitute for residence healthcare proof when a family is settling in Spain and registering for the CUE. Keep it for travel, but for residence each member should have the cover their status requires — Spanish social security, an accepted S1, or private insurance for those who are economically inactive.
S1 family
An S1 may cover certain dependants in some situations, but this depends on the rules and on how the S1 is registered, so it should be checked for each family member before assuming the whole family is covered. This is particularly relevant for EU retirees moving with a spouse or dependants. Where a family member is not covered by the S1 and is economically inactive, private cover may be needed for that person — often a no-copay Más Salud Familias option. Check entitlement with the relevant authorities first.
Pregnancy & maternity
Private medical insurance and maternity cover can have specific rules, waiting periods and limitations, so families planning a pregnancy or already expecting should check the details before buying. Whether maternity and newborn cover applies, and from when, depends on the plan and the current Sanitas terms — it is not something to assume. Ask us to confirm what a particular plan includes, and how a newborn is added, before you rely on it.
Different positions
This is what makes family cover genuinely different from an individual policy: within one household, people can be in completely different positions at the same time. One parent might be working and covered by Spanish social security; the other might be economically inactive and need private cover for the CUE; the children might be dependants; one spouse might be non-EU on a family route; and one member might have medical history that affects their own terms.
Because of this, families are assessed person by person, and a single answer rarely fits everyone — which is exactly why an EU family quote is always personalised. We work through each member’s status and put together a combined family quote.
Sanitas plans
Depending on the family’s status and reason for cover, Sanitas family options such as Más Salud Familias, Más Salud Sin Copago or other general Sanitas plans may be considered. Residents and Residents Platinum are usually more relevant where a third-country visa or residence route is involved — for example for a non-EU spouse.
In short: an economically inactive EU family registering for the CUE usually fits Más Salud Familias Sin Copago; a family already in public healthcare wanting private access may compare Único, Más Salud or Más Salud Plus; and only a mixed family with a non-EU member on a visa route would typically look at Residents / Platinum for that person.
Local network
Families rely on practical access more than most — children need a paediatrician and a nearby GP, and you want specialists, diagnostics, a hospital and emergency access within reach. Because provision varies by area, check the local cuadro médico for your town before choosing, and confirm Dental Milenium access if dental matters. Our Sanitas medical network, cuadro médico and Sanitas hospitals guides explain how to check for children and adults.
Mistakes
Next steps
Continue with the pages most relevant to your family:
Important information
Tell us about your family — who works, who is economically inactive, ages, any non-EU members and any medical history — and we will assess each member and prepare a personalised family quote, often around a no-copay Más Salud family option where private cover is needed for the CUE or registration purposes. 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.
We assess each family member by status and request a personalised family quote in English.
FAQs
Common questions about health insurance for EU family members in Spain. Each member is assessed by status; private cover is usually a no-copay Más Salud family option, not a visa product.