Norwegian CitizensCUE / Green CertBy Status

Sanitas Health Insurance for Norwegian Citizens in Spain

Norwegian citizens are EU and EEA citizens, so moving to Spain means registering for the green certificate (CUE) rather than applying for a visa — and your Sanitas cover should be matched to your status. Many Norwegian citizens are covered through work or an S1; economically inactive applicants may need comprehensive private cover for the CUE. We route Norwegian citizens by status to the right Sanitas option (usually a no-copay Mas Salud plan, not a visa product), with English-speaking help.

For Norwegian citizens and families in SpainRouted by status — CUE, work, autonomo, S1, inactiveNo-copay Mas Salud / Familias / Unico firstResidents / Platinum are not the default for EU citizens
Norwegian CoverCUE / Green Cert
RouteGreen certificate (CUE)
First checkS1 / public healthcare
Common fitNo-copay Mas Salud
Already coveredPrivate optional
Check Your Status →
English-speaking Sanitas specialists for Norwegian citizens
Routed by status, not by visa product
No-copay Mas Salud / Familias / Unico
Personalised quotes, no obligation

Do you need it

Do Norwegian Citizens Need Private Health Insurance in Spain?

Policy terms, acceptance, waiting periods and documentation requirements can change, so always check the current Sanitas wording and your personal policy conditions (and any local requirements) before relying on cover or applying.

It depends on your status, and the visa-specific products are usually not the answer. Norwegian citizens are EU and EEA citizens, so they register for residency through the green certificate (CUE) rather than a visa, and their healthcare route follows their entitlement. The first question is always whether you can use an S1 or otherwise access public healthcare — if so, you may not need private cover for registration at all.

Where there is no S1 or public entitlement, an economically inactive Norwegian citizen may be asked for comprehensive private cover for the CUE — and there, a no-copay Mas Salud plan is usually the natural fit, not a visa product.

Norwegian citizens are EEA, not EU. Norway is part of the EEA, so Norwegian citizens are not EU citizens — but they usually fall under EEA-style free-movement and residence rules rather than third-country visa routes, and are routed by status (working, self-employed, retired with public entitlement, economically inactive, or already resident), not defaulted to a visa product.

Which route

Norwegian Citizens — Which Route Applies?

Work through it by status — this table is the quick guide:

Norwegian citizen situationHealthcare position to checkSanitas option to consider
Working in SpainSpanish social security may give public healthcarePrivate Sanitas optional
Autonomo in SpainPublic healthcare may apply through social securityPrivate Sanitas optional
Economically inactive, applying for CUEPrivate comprehensive cover may be requiredMas Salud Sin Copago
Norwegian retiree with an S1Public healthcare may apply through the S1Sanitas optional private upgrade
Norwegian retiree without S1 / public coverPrivate cover may be neededMas Salud / Unico depending on age
Norwegian familyEach member checked separatelyMas Salud Familias / general options
Norwegian citizen with a non-EU spouseMixed routeCase-by-case
Already resident with public healthcarePrivate cover optionalMas Salud / Unico / general Sanitas

So the honest headline: check your S1 and public entitlement first; only arrange private cover where it is actually needed, and where it is, lead with a no-copay Mas Salud plan.

CUE

The CUE / Green Certificate

Any EU and EEA citizen planning to live in Spain for more than three months registers on the Central Register of Foreign Nationals, using form EX-18 at an immigration office or national police station; this carries your NIE. It is not a visa. Depending on your status, the office may ask you to show healthcare cover — which is where private insurance comes in for economically inactive applicants. Requirements vary by province and office. See our EU residency certificate guide.

Working

Working and Self-Employed Norwegian Citizens

Norwegian citizens who work in Spain as an employee, or register as autonomo, generally enter Spanish social security and gain access to public healthcare — which usually removes the need for private insurance for the CUE itself. Many still choose private Sanitas cover as an optional upgrade for faster specialists, diagnostics and hospitals, but it is typically a choice rather than a registration requirement once you are in the public system through work. See self-employed cover.

S1 retirees

Norwegian Retirees and the S1

Norwegian retirees may be able to use an S1 — by which their home country funds their healthcare in Spain — to access the public system, in which case private insurance may not be required for the CUE. Others do not have an S1, or do not yet qualify, and may be treated as economically inactive and asked for comprehensive private cover — where a no-copay Mas Salud plan is usually the fit. Even S1 holders often add private Sanitas cover for faster private access. Check eligibility with the relevant authorities. See our EU retirees guide.

EHIC

Can Norwegian Citizens Use an EHIC for Residence?

Not for residence. The EHIC is designed for temporary stays and medically necessary treatment during visits. It is not normally treated as full long-term residence healthcare proof for someone settling in Spain and registering for the CUE. For residence, the route is an S1, other public entitlement, or comprehensive private cover for those who are economically inactive. Keep your EHIC for travel, and check the current requirements for your province.

Plans

Which Sanitas Plans Fit Norwegian Citizens?

Because Norwegian citizens register rather than apply for a visa, cover is matched to status:

CUE / economically inactive

A comprehensive no-copay plan such as Mas Salud Sin Copago is usually the cleaner fit for registration.

Couples and families

A comprehensive family option such as Mas Salud Familias Sin Copago is the natural choice, with each member checked separately.

Already resident / want private access

General options such as Unico (designed for 60+), Mas Salud or Mas Salud Plus may suit, depending on age, health declaration and current availability.

Residents/Platinum?

Are Sanitas Residents or Residents Platinum Needed for Norwegian Citizens?

Usually not as the first option. Norwegian citizens are EU and EEA citizens, so they are normally routed by status to Mas Salud, Mas Salud Familias, Unico or another general Sanitas plan. Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum are more relevant to third-country visa routes, or to mixed-family cases where a non-EU family member is on a visa route. We route Norwegian citizens to the suitable option rather than defaulting to a visa product.

Families

Norwegian Families

Norwegian families are rarely uniform. Norwegian spouses and children may have EU rights of their own, while a non-EU spouse or child may follow a different route (a family-member-of-an-EU-citizen process, not a third-country consulate visa). An economically inactive family may need private cover for the CUE, where Mas Salud Familias is usually the fit; each family member's healthcare entitlement should be checked individually. See our EU family members guide and best plan for families.

Communities

Norwegian Communities in Spain

Norwegian residents have a strong presence on the Costa Blanca — especially Alfaz del Pi, Albir, Altea and Torrevieja, which have large Norwegian communities — plus the Costa del Sol and the Canary Islands. Check local Sanitas network access, specialists, diagnostics, hospitals and Dental Milenium availability before choosing a plan.

Wherever you settle, check the local Sanitas medical network, specialists, diagnostics, hospitals, Dental Milenium clinics and cuadro medico before choosing a plan.

EEA

Norway: EEA, Not EU

Norway is part of the EEA, not the EU, so Norwegian citizens are not EU citizens — but they usually fall under EEA-style free-movement and residence rules rather than standard third-country visa routes. Their healthcare position should still be checked by status: working, self-employed, retired with public entitlement, economically inactive, or already resident. Where private cover is needed for residence, a no-copay Mas Salud plan is usually the fit, just as for EU citizens — the visa-specific Residents products are not normally the route.

Age limits

Age Limits for Norwegian Applicants

Age affects which plans you can take out as a new applicant, so it is worth knowing the general picture (confirm current terms):

Sanitas planTypical age for a NEW applicationNotes
Sanitas UnicoDesigned for 60+ — no upper contracting ageGenerally no health questionnaire, subject to current terms
Sanitas Mas Salud / Mas Salud FamiliasCommonly up to 75 for new applicantsHealth declaration applies, subject to current terms
Sanitas ResidentsCommonly up to 75 for new applicantsFor non-EU visa / residency routes, subject to current terms
Sanitas Residents PlatinumMaximum contracting age of 64Broader / international-style cover — check current terms

Age limits matter most at the point of application. Once a Sanitas policy has been accepted, contracted and paid, many plans continue without a maximum permanence age — reaching 75, for example, does not automatically cancel a policy you already hold — provided the policy stays active and its terms are met. These figures are a general guide only and should be confirmed against the current Sanitas tariff before buying.

Mistakes

Common Mistakes Norwegian Citizens Make

  • Buying a visa product (Residents/Platinum) when a no-copay Mas Salud plan would fit better and cost less
  • Not checking S1 entitlement before arranging private cover
  • Assuming an EHIC is enough for residence
  • Choosing a copay plan for the CUE when no-copay is safer
  • Assuming all Norwegian citizens must buy private insurance
  • Not checking each family member's entitlement separately
  • Not checking the local Sanitas network before choosing

Important information

Important Information

Important: Sanitas policy benefits, exclusions, waiting periods, authorisation rules, medical network access and visa suitability can change. Cover also depends on the specific policy chosen, the applicant’s personal terms and conditions, health declaration, acceptance terms and any individual exclusions applied by Sanitas. Always check the actual current Sanitas policy wording, certificate wording, general terms and personal policy conditions before relying on any cover or making a visa, medical or financial decision.

Get a Sanitas Quote as a Norwegian Citizen

Tell us your status — working, self-employed, retired with or without an S1, economically inactive, or already resident — and we will route you to the right Sanitas option (usually a no-copay Mas Salud plan where private cover is needed) and prepare a personalised quote. 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.

  • Routed by status, not by visa product
  • No-copay Mas Salud / Familias / Unico
  • English-speaking support
  • No obligation

Request a Personalised Sanitas Quote

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

A Norwegian citizen settling in Spain?

We route Norwegian citizens by status, in English, and only quote private cover where it is needed.

📞 Arrange a Callback →

FAQs

Norwegian Citizens — Common Questions

Common questions from Norwegian citizens about health insurance in Spain. Norwegian citizens are routed by status — usually to a no-copay Mas Salud option, not a visa product.

Yes. Norwegian citizens can take out Sanitas private health insurance in Spain. Because Norwegian citizens are EU or EEA citizens, they register for residency through the green certificate (CUE) rather than a visa, so they are routed by status rather than to a visa product. Where private cover is needed — for example for an economically inactive applicant registering for the CUE — a no-copay Mas Salud plan is usually the natural fit. We match the right Sanitas option to your situation and prepare a personalised quote.
It depends on your status. Working and self-employed Norwegian citizens generally enter Spanish social security and gain public healthcare, so private insurance is usually optional. Retirees with an accepted S1 may use public healthcare. Economically inactive Norwegian citizens without an S1 are usually asked for comprehensive private cover to register for the CUE. So some need private cover and some do not. We check your position first and only quote private cover where it is actually needed.
No. Norwegian citizens are EU or EEA citizens with freedom of movement, so they do not apply for a visa. Instead they register for residency through the green certificate (CUE), using form EX-18 at an immigration office or national police station. This is why the visa-specific Sanitas products are not normally the right route — Norwegian citizens are routed by status to a general or no-copay Sanitas plan where private cover is needed. Requirements vary by office, so always check your local process.
Only some do. Economically inactive Norwegian citizens — living on savings or a pension without an S1 — are usually asked for comprehensive private cover plus sufficient resources to register, and a no-copay policy is the safer choice. Working Norwegian citizens and accepted S1 holders generally do not need private cover for registration. Requirements vary by province and office, so always check your local process. We help you confirm whether you need cover and prepare a suitable quote.
No — not for residency. The EHIC is designed for temporary stays and medically necessary treatment during visits, not for someone registering as a resident. For the CUE, offices want cover that reflects you living in Spain: Spanish social security through work, an accepted S1, or comprehensive private insurance for economically inactive applicants. Keep your EHIC for travel, but do not rely on it for residency registration, and check the current requirements for your province.
Often, depending on entitlement. Norwegian retirees may be able to use an S1 — by which their home country funds their healthcare in Spain — to access the public system, in which case private insurance may not be required for the CUE. Others do not have an S1, or do not yet qualify, and may be treated as economically inactive and asked for private cover. Even S1 holders sometimes add private Sanitas cover for faster private access. Check eligibility with the relevant authorities; we handle the insurance side.
It depends on your status, and it is usually not a visa product. Economically inactive Norwegian citizens registering for the CUE often fit Mas Salud Sin Copago, or Mas Salud Familias for a couple or family. Norwegian citizens already in public healthcare who want private access may compare Unico, Mas Salud or Mas Salud Plus, depending on age and current terms. Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum are mainly for third-country visa routes. We route you by status and prepare a personalised quote.
Usually not as the first option. Norwegian citizens are EU or EEA citizens, so they register through the green certificate rather than a visa, and are normally routed by status to Mas Salud, Mas Salud Familias, Unico or another general Sanitas plan. Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum are more relevant to third-country visa routes, or to mixed-family cases where a non-EU family member is on a visa route. We route Norwegian citizens to the suitable option rather than defaulting to a visa product.
Yes, where private family cover is needed — for example an economically inactive Norwegian family registering for the CUE — Mas Salud Familias Sin Copago is usually the natural comprehensive no-copay option. Families already in public healthcare who want private access may compare general options. Each member is assessed individually, because entitlements can differ within a family, and mixed EU / non-EU families need extra care. We assess each person and prepare a combined family quote.
Their routes can differ. The Norwegian (EU) member registers through the green certificate, while a non-EU spouse 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 they should be checked carefully. Do not assume the Norwegian member's arrangements automatically cover a non-EU spouse. We help mixed families check each person's position and arrange suitable cover.
Generally yes. Norwegian citizens employed in Spain, or registered as autonomo (self-employed) and paying Spanish social security, usually gain access to the public health system — which removes the registration requirement for private insurance. Many still take private Sanitas cover as an optional upgrade for faster specialists, diagnostics and hospitals, but that is a personal choice rather than a requirement once you are in the public system through work. We can help you compare general Sanitas options if you want private cover on top.
Yes, where appropriate. Sanitas Unico is designed for ages 60 and over, generally with no upper contracting age and no health questionnaire, subject to current terms — useful for older Norwegian citizens, including those who already have public healthcare and simply want a private option. For economically inactive Norwegian citizens who need comprehensive cover for the CUE, a no-copay Mas Salud plan is usually the better fit. We check which suits your age and situation and prepare a personalised quote.
Yes. Medical history is assessed through the health declaration and underwriting, and may affect acceptance, an exclusion, or the personal terms offered. Having a condition does not automatically rule out cover. Declaring everything relevant gives the most accurate quote and avoids problems with claims later. We handle medical history carefully and never promise cover for a specific pre-existing condition. Acceptance and terms depend on the individual case and current Sanitas criteria.