Expat Health Insurance 2026: What You Actually Need and How Much It Costs
The most common financial mistake expats make isn't underestimating rent or food costs — it's ignoring health insurance until something goes wrong. A single hospital stay can wipe out months of savings. Here's what you need to know.
What Does International Health Insurance Cost?
- Basic coverage (hospitalization only): $50–$100/month
- Comprehensive (including outpatient, dental): $150–$400/month
- Premium (with US coverage, no deductible): $400–$800/month
- Costs increase significantly after age 45
Top International Health Insurance Providers
Cigna Global, AXA, Allianz Care, and SafetyWing are the most-used providers among expats. SafetyWing is the budget option ($40–$60/month) popular with younger nomads, while Cigna and AXA serve those needing serious comprehensive coverage.
Coverage You Absolutely Need
- Hospitalization with no annual limit (medical costs can be catastrophic)
- Medical evacuation — can cost $50,000–$200,000 without coverage
- Emergency dental (painful and expensive to treat abroad uninsured)
- Mental health coverage — increasingly standard
Country-Specific Considerations
Some countries with excellent public healthcare (Germany, Canada) still require private insurance for visa applications. Others like Thailand have private hospitals so affordable that some expats self-insure for routine care but get catastrophic-only coverage.