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Get a Quote →Sanitas without copayments in Spain explained — how no-copay cover works, why it costs more monthly but charges nothing per service, why visa and residency applicants usually need it, and how it suits families and frequent users. Normally an annual 12-month policy.
Overview
Sanitas no-copay (sin copago) plans charge nothing per service, so you pay only the monthly premium, which is higher than a copay plan. Visa and residency routes normally require no-copay cover, and it suits families and frequent users who value predictable costs. It is normally an annual 12-month policy.
No-copayment (sin copago) plans are the type of Spanish private health insurance most often needed for visas and most valued by frequent users. A no-copay plan charges nothing per service — you pay only your monthly premium, with no per-visit charges — in exchange for a higher monthly cost than a copay plan. This guide explains how no-copay cover works, why visa applicants normally need it, and who it suits best.
We frame it clearly: no-copay is not simply "better" than copay, it is a different cost structure that suits certain people and is required for certain purposes. See the comparison on copay vs no-copay and the copay side on Sanitas with copayments.
What
No-copay means there is no fixed charge each time you use a service — specialist visits, tests and other covered care do not carry a per-use charge. You pay your monthly premium and then use covered services without paying at the point of care (subject to the plan's terms and network). This makes costs predictable, which many people value. See health insurance without copayment.
Costs more
Because there are no per-service charges, the insurer sets a higher monthly premium than an equivalent copay plan. In effect, you pay more up front each month in exchange for not paying per visit. For people who use healthcare regularly, this is often better value and more predictable; for very low users, a copay plan may cost less overall. We help you weigh it up.
Visa
This is the main reason no-copay plans matter so much for people moving to Spain: they are normally the visa product. A copay plan is generally not suitable for a visa.
Routes
The Non-Lucrative Visa normally requires comprehensive no-copay cover with the right certificate.
The Digital Nomad Visa normally requires full private no-copay cover where private insurance is the healthcare proof.
Student routes need suitable cover; see student visa health insurance.
Residency routes generally expect no-copay comprehensive cover; confirm the requirement for your case.
Annual
A no-copay visa or residency policy is normally an annual 12-month private health insurance policy — not a short-term or trip policy. The higher monthly premium reflects the no-per-visit structure, not a shorter term. It is the same annual cover you keep active through arrival, the TIE and your first renewal. See first-year cover.
Families
Families with children, and anyone who expects to use healthcare often, usually benefit from no-copay cover because there are no per-visit charges to add up across many appointments. The higher premium buys predictability. We quote families together and help you see whether no-copay is the better value for your expected use. See family health insurance.
Residents
The main no-copay options for visa and residency are Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum, which differ in scope — for example international elements. Compare them on the Residents vs Residents Platinum page. Both are no-copay and designed for visa and residency use; the choice between them depends on how much cover you want.
Vs reimburse
No-copay is about not paying per service; reimbursement is a separate concept — paying for treatment and claiming back eligible costs. A no-copay plan typically uses direct access to the network rather than reimbursement, which is simpler at the point of care. See direct access vs reimbursement.
Check
Table
| Feature | With copayments | Without copayments | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Charge per service | Small charge per use | No charge | No-copay: frequent users |
| Monthly premium | Lower | Higher | Copay: low users |
| Visa suitability | Usually not | Usually required | No-copay for visas |
| Cost predictability | Varies with use | Predictable | No-copay for budgeting |
| Families / frequent use | Charges add up | No per-visit charges | No-copay |
The right choice depends on your use and whether you need a visa-suitable plan.
How we help
We make sure you have a genuine no-copay plan where you need one (especially for a visa), compare it honestly with copay for your expected use, and recommend between Residents and Residents Platinum. Get a quote or contact us.
How works
Day to day, a no-copay plan is the simplest possible experience: you pay your monthly premium and then use covered care — specialist visits, tests, treatment — without paying anything per visit, subject to the plan's terms and network. There is no deductible to meet and no small charges to track. For people who use healthcare regularly, this is both convenient and predictable: you know exactly what your healthcare costs each month. See health insurance without copayment.
Predictable
The biggest practical appeal of no-copay cover is predictability. Whether you see a doctor once a year or twenty times, your cost is the same monthly premium. For budgeting — especially for families and retirees — this certainty is valuable, and it is one reason no-copay plans are popular beyond just visa applicants. You trade a higher premium for the comfort of no per-visit charges. See Sanitas pricing.
Example nocopay
Suppose a no-copay plan has a higher monthly premium than a copay plan but no per-visit charges. If you use healthcare often, the no-copay plan's flat cost can be cheaper over the year than the copay plan's lower premium plus many small charges — and it is always predictable. If you barely use care, the copay plan might cost less. The right choice depends on use, and we help you work it out. See with copayments.
Why visa detail
Spanish visa and residency routes normally require that your private cover has no co-payments, so that you genuinely have comprehensive cover without charges at the point of care. This is why a no-copay plan is the standard visa product. A copay plan, with its per-service charges, is generally not accepted for visa purposes. If you are applying for a visa, no-copay is not just a preference — it is normally the requirement. See visa-compliant cover.
Families nocopay
Families with children often get the most from no-copay cover, because children tend to need frequent appointments and per-visit charges would add up quickly. With no-copay, the cost is the predictable premium regardless of how many times the children are seen. For a busy family, that predictability and the absence of per-visit charges usually outweigh the higher premium. See family health insurance.
Retirees nocopay
Retirees and anyone who expects to use healthcare regularly often prefer no-copay cover for the same reasons: no per-visit charges and predictable costs. Acceptance and terms can depend on age and health, and we are honest about what is realistic while finding the most suitable no-copay option. See retiree health insurance.
Choosing plan
The main no-copay options for visa and residency are Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum, which differ in scope — for example international elements. Compare them on the Residents vs Residents Platinum page. Both are no-copay and visa-suitable; the choice depends on how much cover you want and whether wider elements matter to you. We help you decide between them.
Annual nocopay
A no-copay plan's higher monthly premium reflects the no-per-visit structure, not a shorter or special term. Like all Spanish private cover, it is normally an annual 12-month policy that renews. You keep it active through arrival, the TIE and your first renewal. The higher premium buys the no-charge experience for the year, not a different kind of policy. See first-year cover.
Mistakes nocopay
Decide nocopay
Decide by route and use: if you need a visa or use healthcare often, no-copay is usually right; if you rarely use care and do not need a visa, a copay plan may cost less. Then choose between Residents and Residents Platinum on scope. Tell us your route and expected use and we will recommend a suitable no-copay plan. Get a quote.
Most popular
Among people moving to Spain on a visa, no-copay cover is by far the most common choice, simply because it is normally the requirement. But it is also popular beyond visa applicants — EU citizens and settled residents who use healthcare regularly often choose it for the predictable, no-per-visit experience. If you value knowing your healthcare costs the same each month regardless of use, no-copay delivers that. See copay vs no-copay.
So while no-copay is essential for visas, it is also a genuinely good choice for many general users. We help you decide whether it suits you on the merits, not just because of a visa. See with copayments.
Network nocopay
On a no-copay plan you generally use the Sanitas network directly — seeing doctors, having tests and receiving treatment — without paying at the point of care and without filing claims for routine care. This combination of direct access and no per-visit charges is about the simplest healthcare experience available, which is part of why it is so valued. Some products are reimbursement-based, so confirm a plan is direct-access if that matters to you. See direct access vs reimbursement.
If avoiding both charges and paperwork appeals, a direct-access no-copay plan is the way to achieve it. We confirm how a plan works so you know exactly what to expect at the clinic or hospital.
Couples nocopay
For couples who both use healthcare, or expect to, no-copay cover keeps costs predictable across two people with no per-visit charges to track. A joint or family policy on a no-copay basis is straightforward to budget for and convenient to use. Where one partner uses care far more than the other, we still help you compare structures, but no-copay often suits couples who value simplicity. See family health insurance.
We quote couples together and explain how no-copay compares with copay for your combined expected use, so you choose the structure that fits both of you. See Residents vs Platinum.
Switching nocopay
People sometimes start on a copay plan and later need no-copay — for example when they decide to apply for a visa, or when their healthcare use increases. Because Spanish policies are annual, renewal is the natural point to switch to no-copay, and we can help you do so without a gap. If a visa application is coming up, make sure you move to a no-copay plan in good time. See changing cover after moving and visa-compliant cover.
We help you switch structure at the right time so your cover matches your needs — particularly important if you are moving from general cover to a visa application. See keeping cover active for the TIE.
Summary nocopay
To summarise: a no-copay plan charges nothing per service for a higher monthly premium, is normally required for visas and residency, suits families and frequent users, and is an annual 12-month policy. It is not automatically "better" than copay — for very low users a copay plan can cost less — but it is the standard visa product and the more predictable choice for regular users.
Tell us your route and expected use and we will recommend a suitable no-copay plan, help you choose between Residents and Residents Platinum, and make sure it is genuinely visa-suitable if you need it. Get a quote or contact us.
Best visa
For visa and residency applicants, no-copay is not just suitable — it is normally the required and most sensible choice. It meets the requirement for cover without per-service charges, it gives predictable costs from day one, and it is the comprehensive annual policy you keep active through arrival, the TIE and your first renewal. In short, it is the standard visa product, and choosing it removes any doubt about whether your cover meets the requirement. See visa-compliant cover and NLV.
If you are applying for a visa, do not be tempted by a cheaper copay plan that may not be accepted — a no-copay plan is the safe, standard choice. We make sure the plan you choose is genuinely no-copay and visa-suitable. See DNV health insurance.
Right plan
Choosing the right no-copay plan means matching the scope to your needs — for visas, comparing Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum on cover and any international elements — and confirming it is genuinely no-copay and certificate-suitable. We handle this for you, recommending between the options and making sure the plan meets your requirement, whether for a visa or for general predictable cover.
Tell us your route and expected use and we will recommend a suitable no-copay plan and explain the choice clearly. Get a quote or contact us.
Important information
Tell us your route and expected use and we will recommend a suitable no-copay Sanitas plan. 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.