Portugal · Healthcare

Yes, it works.
Here's how.

Legal residents get access to Portugal's public health service — and since 2022, almost all of it is free at the point of use. Most expats run a hybrid: SNS for the big stuff, a private policy for speed. Here are the real numbers.

Figures verified 2 July 2026
The key numbers · 2026
  • SNS registration: free, at your local health centre, once you're a legal resident
  • GP visits, referrals, prescribed exams: €0 user fees since the 2022–23 reform
  • Non-referred hospital ER visit: ~€14–18, capped at €40 including exams — waived if you're admitted
  • Private insurance at 60–65: roughly €100–200+/month; a couple in their 60s ~€300/month (market estimates)
  • Visa-stage requirement: travel medical insurance with €30,000 minimum coverage including repatriation
  • Life expectancy in Portugal: 81.5 years (INE 2022–24) — above the US and near Canada

Step one: your número de utente

Once you hold a residence permit, register at the Centro de Saúde covering your address. Bring your residence permit, passport, NIF, and proof of address. Registration is free and the user number (número de utente) is typically issued the same day. That number is your key to the whole public system: a family doctor (médico de família), specialist referrals, hospital care, and subsidised prescriptions.

One honest caveat: family-doctor assignment depends on local capacity — in some areas, especially the Algarve and greater Lisbon, you may wait for a permanent GP assignment. You can still be seen; SNS 24 (dial 808 24 24 24) triages by phone.

What you'll actually pay

User fees (taxas moderadoras) were almost entirely abolished. Primary care, referred specialist visits, and prescribed exams carry no fee. The one that remains: going to a hospital emergency department without a referral (from SNS 24, a health centre, or the INEM ambulance service) — around €14–18 per episode, capped at €40 with exams, and waived entirely if the visit ends in admission. Low-income residents (below €805.70/month in 2026) are exempt.

Private insurance: what changes in your 60s

Private cover buys speed and English-speaking convenience: CUF, Hospital da Luz, and Lusíadas run modern private hospitals in Lisbon, Porto, and the Algarve. The catch for our readers is age. Premiums are age-rated — plan on roughly €100–200+ per month per person in your early-to-mid 60s — and many Portuguese insurers cap new enrolment around age 65–70. If private cover matters to you, buy it before your birthday makes it complicated, and read the pre-existing-condition exclusions carefully.

StageWhat you need
Visa application (D7/D8)Travel medical insurance, €30,000 minimum coverage incl. hospitalisation and repatriation. Some consulates now ask for 12-month validity — check your consulate's checklist.
First months in PortugalPrivate health policy (or continued international cover) until your residence permit and SNS registration are done.
Settled residentSNS as the backbone; optional private policy for speed. Many long-term expats keep both.
In this section

Guides

Coming soon

Registering with the SNS, step by step

Documents, the health-centre visit, and what to do if there's no family doctor available.

Coming soon

Private insurance over 60: the real market

Which insurers take new clients at what ages, and what the exclusions actually say.

Coming soon

Medicare and moving abroad

What happens to your US Medicare when you leave, and why most people keep Part A.

Sources

  1. SNS access for foreign residents: gov.pt
  2. User fees: ERS FAQ; SNS 24; 2026 exemption threshold per IAS €537.13 (Portaria 480-A/2025/1)
  3. Insurance costs at 60–65: International Living (2026), C1 Brokers (2025) — market estimates, age/risk-rated
  4. Visa insurance requirement: Schengen €30,000 minimum; consular practice 2026
  5. Life expectancy: INE life tables 2022–2024
  6. Private groups: CUF, Hospital da Luz, Lusíadas
This page is general information, not medical or insurance advice. Coverage terms vary by insurer and change; confirm before buying.
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