Maternity CoverPlan & Policy-SpecificAsk Before Assuming

Sanitas Maternity Cover in Spain

Maternity, pregnancy and newborn cover depend on the specific Sanitas plan and its official policy wording. Before assuming anything, ask us for a plan-specific review — we help with the insurance and never overstate cover.

Maternity depends on the plan & wordingExisting pregnancy: do not assume coverFertility treatment generally excludedAsk us before you rely on cover
Maternity CoverPlan-specific
MaternityDepends on plan & wording
Visa plansNo waiting periods
Existing pregnancyDo not assume covered
Fertility treatmentGenerally excluded
NewbornMust be registered
Ask Us to Check →
Maternity depends on the plan & wording
Existing pregnancy: do not assume cover
Fertility treatment generally excluded
Ask us before you rely on cover

Overview

Sanitas Maternity Cover in Spain

We do not handle visa applications or give immigration legal advice. We are English-speaking Sanitas health insurance specialists who help you arrange the private health insurance many Spanish visa and residency routes require — suitable policy options, certificate wording, start dates and personalised quotes. Visa rules vary by consulate and change over time, so always confirm the full immigration requirements with the relevant Spanish consulate, an Extranjería office or a qualified immigration specialist.
In short

Maternity, pregnancy and newborn cover with Sanitas depend on the specific plan and its official policy wording — so the honest first step is to check, not to assume. The Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum visa plans are issued with no waiting periods (per their policy wording), so where maternity is included it is available from the policy start date; but an existing pregnancy at the point of application may be treated as a pre-existing situation and is not something to assume will be covered. Fertility and assisted-reproduction treatment is generally excluded, and a newborn is only covered once registered as a Sanitas insured. If maternity matters to you, ask us for a plan-specific review before relying on cover.

Maternity is one of the most important — and most misunderstood — areas of private health insurance, so this page is written to be cautious and factual rather than reassuring for its own sake. What is covered, when, and on which plan is set out in the official Sanitas policy wording, and it varies by plan. Rather than tell you maternity "is included", we would rather help you check exactly what your plan provides and flag clearly what is not covered.

We help English-speaking applicants understand and arrange the right Sanitas cover. We do not provide medical advice and we do not handle visa applications or give immigration legal advice. If you are planning a family, or are already pregnant, the most useful thing you can do is speak to us before assuming anything — we will check the current terms with you.

Depends

Maternity Cover Depends on the Plan and the Policy Wording

Do not assume maternity is covered, or covered immediately, on any given plan. Whether maternity is included, from when, and with what limits depends on the specific Sanitas plan and the official policy wording. Always check the current terms — or ask us to check them with you — before relying on cover.

Different Sanitas plans treat maternity differently. On the visa plans (Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum) maternity and childbirth are included as part of comprehensive cover, and those plans carry no waiting periods per their policy wording. Other Sanitas plans may include maternity on different terms, or apply waiting periods. Because the detail is binding and varies, we confirm it for the specific plan you are considering rather than relying on a general impression.

Waiting

Maternity and Waiting Periods

A waiting period is a length of time after a policy starts before a benefit can be used. For maternity, whether one applies depends entirely on the plan:

  • The <a href="/sanitas-residents/">Sanitas Residents</a> and <a href="/sanitas-residents-platinum/">Residents Platinum</a> visa plans are issued with no waiting periods (per their policy wording), so where maternity is included it is available from the policy start date.
  • Other Sanitas plans may apply waiting periods to maternity or other benefits — this varies by plan and current terms.
  • An existing pregnancy is a separate matter from waiting periods (see below) and is treated through the health declaration.

We do not quote a fixed maternity waiting-period figure here, because the correct position is the one in your plan's policy wording — and we check it for you. See how waiting periods work and Sanitas waiting periods.

Existing

If You Are Already Pregnant

An existing pregnancy at the time of application may be treated as a pre-existing situation, and cover will depend on the plan, the insurer's rules and the official policy wording. Do not assume an existing pregnancy will be covered by a newly contracted policy.

If you are already pregnant, the right step is to ask us to check the current Sanitas terms before relying on cover, rather than applying and assuming. You should also declare the pregnancy honestly on the health questionnaire (see below). That does not necessarily mean cover is pointless — you may still want comprehensive cover for everything else — but be realistic about the current pregnancy. See pre-existing conditions.

Included

What Maternity and Childbirth Can Include

Where maternity is included on a plan and any conditions are met, comprehensive Sanitas cover generally provides obstetrics and gynaecology, hospital childbirth (a midwife is available for hospital-based delivery), and related care — all subject to the official policy wording and the medical network. A pregnancy support programme (information and guidance from midwives and nurses) is also provided on the visa plans. The exact scope is plan-specific, so confirm the detail for your plan.

The policy wording for the visa plans expressly excludes water birth, home birth and alternative childbirth techniques; voluntary interruption (termination) of pregnancy; and any expenses arising from gestational surrogacy. These are not covered — do not assume otherwise.

Fertility

Fertility, IVF and Assisted Reproduction

Fertility treatment, IVF and assisted reproduction are highly plan-specific and should be checked against the official policy wording. Do not assume fertility treatment is included as part of maternity cover.

On the main Sanitas visa plans, the policy wording excludes the diagnosis and treatment of infertility, including in vitro fertilisation and artificial insemination; only a limited set of fertility diagnostic tests, up to the point of diagnosis, is included. If fertility cover matters to you, ask us to check the exact terms before relying on anything — we will be honest about what is and is not provided.

Newborn

Newborn Cover Is Not Automatic

Adding a newborn to cover is not automatic. Under the visa plans' policy wording, a newborn's healthcare is only covered once the child is registered as a Sanitas insured — normally by completing an application within a set period after birth (commonly within around 30 days), and where the mother's delivery was covered by the policy. If the inclusion is not completed in time or the conditions are not met, Sanitas may decline to add the newborn, and expenses incurred before the child is added are not covered.

Routine newborn checks in the first days of life may be provided, but care arising from a complication or condition present at birth depends on the newborn being insured. The practical point: understand how and when a baby can be added so there is no gap in the child's cover — tell us as early as possible. See family health insurance.

Visa

Visa Applicants and Pregnancy

Visa applicants still need suitable private health insurance for the visa route, but pregnancy or maternity-related cover depends on the insurer's medical underwriting, the plan terms and any waiting periods — being pregnant does not change the immigration requirement, and it is not something a certificate can override.

We help with the insurance only. We do not handle visa applications or give immigration legal advice, and visa and residency decisions rest with the Spanish authorities. Always confirm the full immigration requirements with the relevant Spanish consulate, the UGE, an Extranjería office or a qualified immigration specialist. See visa-compliant cover.

Declare

Declaring Pregnancy Honestly

Pregnancy, current treatment, recent tests, ongoing investigations and relevant medical history should be disclosed accurately during the application. The health questionnaire is how Sanitas assesses the situation, and non-disclosure or inaccurate information may affect a claim or the validity of the policy.

This is not a reason to avoid applying — it is a reason to be accurate and to let us help you present the information correctly. See the medical questionnaire and health/medical declaration guides.

Timing

Planning a Family: Timing and Honest Expectations

If you are planning a family, arrange suitable cover early and check the policy wording before you rely on maternity benefits — that is the single most useful step. On plans that apply a maternity waiting period, arranging cover ahead of time lets it pass; on the visa plans there is no waiting period, but an existing pregnancy is still treated as pre-existing.

If you are already pregnant, do not assume cover — ask us for a plan-specific review first. We will tell you honestly what is realistic on each plan, rather than imply a benefit that may not apply.

Check

What to Check (and What to Ask Us)

  • Whether maternity is included on the specific plan, and from when
  • Whether any waiting period applies on that plan (the visa plans have none)
  • How an existing pregnancy would be treated, before you apply
  • What is excluded (e.g. water/home birth, termination, surrogacy, fertility treatment)
  • How and when a newborn must be registered to be covered

If you are not sure, do not guess from a brochure — ask us and we will check the current policy wording with you, in plain English.

Table

Maternity Questions to Ask Before You Rely on Cover

QuestionWhy it mattersWhat we check for you
Is maternity included on this plan?It is not on every planThe plan's policy wording
Is there a waiting period?Affects when benefits applyThe plan terms (visa plans: none)
Am I already pregnant?Existing pregnancy may be pre-existingHow it would be treated, before you apply
What is excluded?Water/home birth, termination, surrogacy, fertility treatmentThe exclusions for your plan
How is a newborn added?Cover is not automaticThe registration rule and timing
Is fertility treatment covered?Generally excludedWhat, if anything, is included

We confirm each of these against the current Sanitas wording — we do not rely on generic figures.

How we help

How We Help — Ask Before You Assume

Our role with maternity is simple and deliberately cautious: we help you understand what a specific Sanitas plan does and does not provide, check the current policy wording with you, and arrange suitable cover — without overstating anything. If you are planning a family or are already pregnant, speak to us before assuming cover, and we will give you an honest, plan-specific answer.

Important information

Important Information

Important: We do not handle visa applications or provide immigration legal advice. Our role is to help English-speaking applicants understand and arrange the Sanitas private health insurance required for many Spanish visa and residency routes, including suitable policy options, certificate wording, start dates and personalised quotes. Visa and residency decisions are made by the Spanish authorities, and applicants should always confirm the full immigration requirements with the relevant Spanish consulate, Extranjería office or a qualified immigration specialist.

Ask Us to Review Maternity Cover Before You Assume

Tell us your situation — planning a family, already pregnant, or comparing plans — and we will check the current Sanitas terms with you in plain English. We help with insurance only and never overstate cover. 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
  • Plan-specific review, not generic answers
  • Honest about exclusions and timing
  • No obligation

Ask Us to Check Cover

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English-speaking Sanitas specialists can help with the health-insurance part of your visa or residency application.

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FAQs

Sanitas Maternity Cover in Spain — 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.

It depends on the plan and the official policy wording. On the Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum visa plans, maternity and childbirth are included as part of comprehensive cover with no waiting periods; other plans may differ. Always check the wording for the specific plan, and an existing pregnancy is treated separately.
Do not assume so. An existing pregnancy at application may be treated as a pre-existing situation, and cover depends on the plan, the insurer's rules and the policy wording. If you are already pregnant, ask us to check the current terms before relying on cover, and declare the pregnancy honestly.
It depends on the plan. The Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum visa plans are issued with no waiting periods per their policy wording, so where maternity is included it applies from the start date. Other plans may apply waiting periods. We do not quote a fixed figure — we check the wording for your plan.
On the visa plans, hospital childbirth is included as part of comprehensive cover (a midwife is available for hospital delivery), subject to the policy wording. Water birth, home birth and alternative birth techniques are expressly excluded, as is voluntary termination of pregnancy. Confirm the detail for your plan.
Generally no. The main Sanitas visa plans exclude the diagnosis and treatment of infertility, including IVF and artificial insemination; only limited fertility diagnostic tests up to diagnosis are included. Do not assume fertility treatment is part of maternity cover — check the policy wording.
No. A newborn is only covered once registered as a Sanitas insured, normally within a set period after birth (commonly around 30 days) and where conditions are met. Expenses before the child is added are not covered, and inclusion can be declined if not completed in time. Tell us early so there is no gap.
No. Maternity depends on the plan terms, underwriting and any waiting periods like any other policyholder; being on a visa does not change that, and a certificate cannot override it. We help with insurance only; visa decisions rest with the Spanish authorities.
Yes. Pregnancy, current treatment and relevant medical history should be disclosed accurately. The questionnaire is how Sanitas assesses the situation, and non-disclosure may affect a claim or the policy's validity.
No — the visa plans' policy wording excludes expenses arising from gestational surrogacy, for both mother and newborn. There are specific rules for registering a child in that situation; ask us if this applies to you.
Ideally before pregnancy where possible, and check the policy wording first. On plans with a maternity waiting period, arranging cover ahead lets it pass; on the visa plans there is no waiting period, but an existing pregnancy is still treated as pre-existing.
No. Cover depends on the plan, the policy wording, underwriting and timing, and we never guarantee acceptance or cover for a specific situation. We give you an honest, plan-specific answer and check the current terms with you.
Ask us, or check the official policy wording. We review the specific plan's terms with you — including waiting periods, exclusions and newborn rules — in plain English, so you are not relying on assumptions.
Tell us your situation — planning a family, already pregnant, or comparing plans — and we will check the current Sanitas terms with you before you rely on anything.