Expat insurance
Expat insurance in Thailand
Comprehensive cover for people who've actually moved to Thailand: multi-year stability, no trip caps, and the proper inpatient/outpatient stack you want when this is home now.
Thailand is the default landing pad for digital nomads in Southeast Asia. Private healthcare in Bangkok and Chiang Mai is genuinely world-class, English-speaking doctors are common, and costs sit at a fraction of US or Western European pricing. The trade-off: visa rules keep shifting, public hospitals are a step down, and most expat-friendly clinics still expect upfront payment unless your insurer has a direct-billing agreement. For stays past six months, international health insurance (not travel insurance) is the right tool.
What expat insurance covers in Thailand
Expat insurance is built for expats with a residence permit or long-stay visa, families, retirees abroad. The lines below are the base. Exact terms are carrier-specific, so always check the policy document for the Thailand situation you care about.
What you get
- Full inpatient and outpatient medical
- Maternity (with waiting period)
- Dental and vision (add-ons)
- Chronic-condition management
- Multi-year renewals without trip-length resets
What it won't do
- Cover in your home country (limited windows on some plans)
- Pre-existing conditions during initial underwriting
- Cosmetic procedures
Typical local costs in Thailand
What insurance protects you from. Costs vary by region inside Thailandand between public and private facilities; these are the numbers we've seen most often in 2026.
| GP visit (private clinic, expat-friendly) | 1,000 to 2,500 THB |
|---|---|
| Specialist consultation | 1,500 to 3,500 THB |
| Basic emergency room visit (non-admission, private) | 3,000 to 8,000 THB |
| One-night hospital stay (private, Bumrungrad / Bangkok Hospital / Samitivej tier) | 8,000 to 25,000 THB |
| Common procedure (e.g. appendectomy, top private hospital) | 150,000 to 400,000 THB |
| International health insurance from-price (32-year-old) | from around $80 to $150 / month |
These are rough ranges. Actual costs depend on hospital tier (Bumrungrad is materially more expensive than a mid-tier private), complexity, time of day, and whether your insurer has a direct-billing agreement. A burst appendix at 2am at Bumrungrad is a different bill from a planned procedure at a regional private hospital. Thai hospitals will quote you in advance if you ask, so confirm pricing before treatment when paying out of pocket.
Healthcare in Thailand: what you're dealing with
Thailand runs a two-tier system that nomads quickly learn to read. The public hospital network, anchored by university hospitals like Siriraj and Chulalongkorn in Bangkok, delivers solid care at very low prices. The experience (queues, paperwork in Thai, mixed English fluency outside major cities) is not what most foreigners want unless they are locked into a specific specialist.
The private side is where Thailand earned its medical-tourism reputation. Bumrungrad International and Bangkok Hospital in the capital, plus Samitivej and BNH, run hotel-grade facilities with US and UK-trained physicians, English-speaking staff, and integrated international patient departments that handle insurance claims, translation, and visa-related medical certificates. Chiang Mai Ram and Bangkok Hospital Phuket cover the two other main nomad hubs at a similar standard.
English-speaking care is genuinely widespread in the private network. You can walk into any major private hospital in Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Phuket, or Pattaya and expect a doctor who can take your history without a translator. Outside those cities English fluency drops fast, and Hua Hin, Koh Samui, and Krabi are mixed.
Most nomads handle care by defaulting to a tier-1 private hospital for anything serious and a walk-in clinic (or telemedicine) for minor issues. The friction point is payment: even with insurance, many hospitals will ask for a card swipe upfront unless your insurer is on their direct-billing list. Worth checking before you need care, not during.
Dental in Thailand is excellent and cheap. Mental health is patchier: English-speaking therapy clusters in Bangkok and is thinner elsewhere. Continuing a specific prescription medication can be surprisingly bureaucratic, and controlled substances are tightly regulated.
Visa & residency requirements
Thailand's visa setup shifted significantly over the past two years. The Destination Thailand Visa (DTV), launched in 2024, opened a long-stay path for remote workers and digital nomads with a five-year multi-entry validity and 180-day stays per entry. The Long-Term Resident (LTR) visa targets higher-earning professionals, retirees, and wealthy global citizens. The Thailand Privilege card (formerly Elite) remains the premium no-questions-asked option. Each carries different health insurance implications.
For the DTV, current guidance points to a minimum of $50,000 USD in health coverage, though specific requirements have moved over time and consulates apply them with some variation. The LTR sets a similar bar and expects cover valid for the visa period. Verify the live requirement on the official Thai e-Visa portal or with the consulate handling your application before you submit.
Short-stay tourists from most Western countries get visa-exempt entry of up to 60 days, but this is not a sustainable nomad strategy and border-run patterns are being slowly squeezed. The Education visa (ED) and the now-defunct Special Tourist Visa have largely been replaced by the DTV as the practical path for stays of six months to several years.
Residency status changes which products are available to you. On a tourist entry you are buying travel insurance or international health insurance from outside Thailand, since local Thai health plans usually are not sold to you. On a DTV or LTR with a Thai address, more options open up, including Thai-domiciled plans, but most experienced nomads stick with a portable international policy that travels with them.
Tax residency kicks in at 180 days in a calendar year. This does not directly change which insurance you can buy, but it changes your overall financial picture and a tax-resident expat usually wants a policy that treats Thailand as a home base rather than a travel destination.
What to watch out for in Thailand
- Scooter and motorbike exclusions are the single most common claim denial in Thailand. Most policies require a valid motorcycle license from your home country (not just a car license) and an International Driving Permit with the motorcycle endorsement. Riding without proper licensing voids the medical claim entirely.
- Adventure activity riders matter here. Scuba diving below 30 metres, Muay Thai training, jet-skiing, and rock climbing often require an extra rider. Diving in Koh Tao without the rider is a real and frequent gap.
- Upfront payment at private hospitals is the norm unless your insurer has a direct-billing relationship with that specific hospital. Check the network list before an emergency, not during one.
- Visa-run interruptions can break continuity on some short-term travel policies. International health plans handle this fine; cheaper travel plans sometimes do not.
- Pre-existing condition exclusions are tighter in Thailand than people expect because the market is insurance-savvy. Declare everything honestly at application; claims investigators are thorough.
- USD vs THB pricing means some international plans bill in USD or EUR. The baht has been volatile, which can swing your effective premium 10 to 15% year-over-year.
FAQ
In most cases Thailand expects long-stay residents and visa applicants to show proof of health coverage. The specific bar (carrier, sum insured, residency-vs-travel cover) depends on your visa class; see "Visa & residency" below for the country's current stance.
Premiums vary by age, plan and deductible far more than by country; the underwriting risk is priced, not the postal code. Use the "Typical local costs" table above to gauge what your insurance protects you from, then run a real quote to see your own number.
It depends on your situation — how long you're staying, your visa class, your age and health, and whether you want cashless treatment or are fine with reimbursement. Rather than push one plan, we match you against the options that actually fit a stay in Thailand: answer a few honest questions and see only what's relevant.
Under a month, travel insurance is usually fine. Past three months, or if you are basing in Thailand, switch to international health insurance. Travel plans cap chronic and routine care, which is exactly what you start needing once you settle in.
Not by default. Most international plans either exclude them, cover them after a 12 to 24 month waiting period, or load the premium. Be honest at application. Thai hospitals share records more than people assume, and undisclosed conditions are the top reason claims get denied.
At Bumrungrad, Bangkok Hospital, and Samitivej, yes, if your insurer has a direct-billing agreement and you have contacted them in advance. Walk in without prior approval and you are paying first and claiming later. Always carry your insurance card and the 24/7 number.
Current guidance points to a minimum of $50,000 USD in health coverage, with the policy valid for your stay. Specifics shift, so check the official Thai e-Visa portal or your consulate before submitting. Most international plans produce DTV-compliant certificates on request.
Thai-domiciled plans usually do not. International plans bought by nomads cover you globally, often excluding the US or with a US rider.
Bumrungrad is generally the most expensive private option in Thailand. Bangkok Hospital and Samitivej sit a tier below on price with comparable clinical quality for most things. For complex specialist work Bumrungrad's reputation is earned; for a sprained ankle it is overkill.
Yes, if you were not properly licensed. This is the most common avoidable insurance disaster in Thailand. Get the IDP motorcycle endorsement before you travel and keep both the IDP and your home license on you.
Usually add-ons rather than core coverage. Thai dental is excellent and cheap enough that many nomads pay out of pocket. A cleaning at a Bangkok private clinic runs 800 to 1,500 THB. Vision is similarly inexpensive.
In Bangkok, yes. There is a real community of English-speaking psychologists and psychiatrists. Chiang Mai has fewer options but they exist. Online therapy from a home-country provider is increasingly the default. Insurance coverage for mental health varies a lot by plan, so check sub-limits before assuming.
Yes. Infectious disease treatment is standard inpatient coverage. The real friction is outpatient testing if you are not yet sure what you have. Confirm outpatient lab coverage in your policy.
Yes. International nomad plans commonly offer family plans. Pricing and dependent age limits vary, so request a quote with all family members included from the start rather than adding them later.
International plans generally follow you, which is the point. Thai-domiciled products usually do not, so if you have a local plan and pivot to Vietnam or Indonesia you are back to square one.
Other insurance for Thailand
Different stages of nomad life need different cover. Here's the full set we've mapped for Thailand.
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