Choosing Private Health Insurance in Portugal (2026): How to Compare Properly

Private Health Insurance in Portugal (2026)

Portugal has a strong public health service, the SNS, and most residents end up using it for serious care. Private insurance sits alongside it, buying speed, choice and English-speaking doctors. The trouble is that the policies are genuinely hard to compare, and the wrong one can leave you paying for a clinic that does not take your insurer. Here is how to compare like for like, and the single check that matters most.

How private cover fits with the SNS

You do not choose one or the other. A common, affordable setup is to register with the SNS once you are resident, and keep a modest private policy for quick appointments and English-speaking care. Local private insurance reimburses private treatment. It does not cover the small public fees, so think of it as a top-up, not a replacement.

The one check that matters most

Most Portuguese plans are built around a provider network. Medis, Multicare and AdvanceCare each run large networks of partnered clinics and hospitals, where the insurer pays the provider directly and you pay only a small co-payment. Go outside the network and you pay up front and claim part of it back.

So before you buy anything, check that the hospitals and clinics you would actually use, the local CUF, Lusíadas, Hospital da Luz or Trofa, are in that insurer’s network. A clinic can be in one insurer’s network and not another’s. This is the check people skip, and the one they regret.

Waiting periods and pre-existing conditions

Two things catch people out:

  • Waiting periods. Cover does not start on day one for everything. Typical waits run to 60 days for routine appointments, 90 to 180 days for surgery, and around a year for maternity. Plan ahead if you know you will need something.
  • Pre-existing conditions. Insurers can lawfully exclude conditions you already have, and you have a duty to declare your health honestly. Hiding something can void a claim later. Get any exclusions listed in writing before you sign.

What drives the price

Premiums depend mostly on your age, and they rise sharply as you get older and at renewal. As a rough, indicative guide, a younger adult might pay in the tens of euros a month, while cover for someone in their seventies can run to a few hundred. Family policies and international expat policies, which cover treatment abroad, cost more again. Budget for the premium to climb over time, not stay flat.

How to compare like for like

  • Confirm your local hospitals are in the insurer’s network.
  • Compare waiting periods in days, especially for surgery and maternity.
  • Get pre-existing exclusions listed specifically, in writing.
  • Check the annual ceiling for each type of care, not just the headline.
  • Compare co-payments per appointment, and the out-of-network reimbursement rate.
  • Ask for the full premium table by age band, so you can see how it grows.

One more thing: a cheap hospital discount card, a plano de saúde, is not insurance. It transfers no risk and carries none of the consumer protections of a regulated policy. Make sure you are buying a true seguro de saúde.

Want help comparing health plans?

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Frequently asked questions

Do I need private insurance if I have the SNS?

You do not have to, but many residents keep a modest policy for faster appointments and English-speaking doctors, while relying on the SNS for serious care.

Will my insurance cover a condition I already have?

Often not. Insurers can exclude pre-existing conditions, and you must declare your health honestly. Ask for exclusions in writing before you buy.

Why was I refused at a clinic that takes private patients?

Most likely it is not in your insurer’s network. Always confirm your local clinics are in-network before choosing a plan.

Sources

  • ASF, the insurance and pension supervisor (health insurance and consumer rules): asf.com.pt
  • Medis, Multicare and AdvanceCare, plan terms and networks: medis.pt, multicare.pt, advancecare.pt
  • SNS, the public health service: sns.gov.pt

General information, current as of June 2026, and not medical or financial advice. Premiums and terms vary by insurer, age and health, and figures here are indicative. Read the policy conditions and compare current quotes before buying. Related reading: the Healthcare Navigator.

Claire Lawrence

Claire Lawrence moved to Portugal and now helps others do the same. Her guidance is built from lived experience and current, official sources, not marketing.

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