financial

Healthcare Costs Compared: US vs Portugal, Spain & Mexico

April 19, 2026 · 9 min read

A retiree's annual out-of-pocket healthcare costs in Portugal average $800–$1,200, compared to $6,500+ in the US—even with Medicare. Here's what changes when you cross the Atlantic.

When Sarah, 64, moved from Phoenix to Lisbon in 2023, she budgeted for housing, groceries, and cultural shock. What she didn't expect? Her cardiologist visit in Portugal's SNS public system cost her exactly €0. The same consultation in Arizona ran her $340 after insurance, with a three-week wait. Her prescription for atorvastatin? €18 for a three-month supply versus $127 back home.

But here's the reality check: Sarah spent eight months researching residency requirements, navigating Medicare gaps, and understanding Portugal's D7 visa before she could access that public healthcare. The "free healthcare abroad" dream requires serious upfront planning—and the wrong moves can cost you more than staying put.

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The US Healthcare Baseline: Why Everyone's Looking for the Exit

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The average American aged 65+ spends $6,883 annually on healthcare, according to 2023 Bureau of Labor Statistics data. That's with Medicare coverage. For those 55-64 still working with employer insurance, the number sits around $5,477 annually in premiums, deductibles, and out-of-pocket costs.

Break it down by common procedures, and the picture gets uglier:

Meanwhile, prescription drugs hit differently when you're on a fixed income. A 90-day supply of common medications like lisinopril averages $85-$120, metformin runs $35-$70, and don't get me started on specialty medications.

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Portugal & Spain: The Public Healthcare Reality Check

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Portugal and Spain offer something the US doesn't: actual universal healthcare systems that cover expats once they establish residency. But "free" comes with strings attached.

Portugal's SNS System

Portugal's Serviço Nacional de Saúde covers residents after they obtain their residência permit, typically 3-4 months after arrival on a D7 visa. The process requires proving €760 monthly income (about $830), housing arrangements, and health insurance for your first few months.

Once you're in the system, routine costs disappear:

The same procedures that bankrupt Americans in the US cost dramatically less, even in Portugal's private system:

Spain's Sistema Nacional de Salud

Spain follows a similar model but with regional variations. The Non-lucrative visa requires proving €2,400 monthly income but gets you into the public system within 90 days of receiving your TIE (foreigner identity card).

Cost comparison at Madrid's top private hospitals like Hospital Ruber Internacional:

Prescription drugs in both countries cost 70-85% less than US prices due to government price controls. That €18 atorvastatin in Portugal? It's €22 in Spain versus $127 in Phoenix.

The catch: Both systems have waiting times for non-urgent procedures. Knee surgery might wait 2-4 months in the public system. That's where many expats use a hybrid approach—public system for routine care, private insurance for urgent procedures. A comprehensive private health plan in Portugal runs €80-€150 monthly for a 65-year-old, compared to $500-$800 for similar coverage in the US.

Mexico: Maximum Affordability, Variable Quality

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Mexico wins on pure cost comparison, but requires more careful navigation. The country offers three healthcare pathways: public IMSS system (for legal residents), private insurance, and cash payments.

IMSS Access Through Residency

Mexico's temporary resident visa requires proving $2,700 monthly income or $45,000 in bank savings. After one year, you can apply for permanent residency and IMSS coverage. Annual IMSS premiums for retirees run $350-$500, covering:

Private Healthcare Costs

Even without IMSS, Mexico's private system beats US pricing.

Mexico City private hospitals (Hospital ABC, Hospital Angeles):

Playa del Carmen/Riviera Maya (popular expat areas):

The quality variance matters more in Mexico than Portugal or Spain. Stick to JCI-accredited hospitals in major cities: Hospital ABC and Hospital Angeles in Mexico City, Hospital San José in Monterrey, Hospiten in Cancún.

Many expats in places like San Miguel de Allende or Puerto Vallarta use cash for routine care and maintain US emergency coverage or international health insurance for major procedures.

Prescription Drugs: The 80% Savings Factor

Close-up of white pills scattered from an orange prescription bottle on a gray surface.

Medication costs abroad will shock you—in a good way. Price regulation in the EU and Mexico's generic drug manufacturing create massive savings.

90-day supply comparison (2024 prices):

Portugal and Spain's public systems cover 90% of chronic medication costs for residents. Mexico's IMSS covers 80-90%. Even paying cash in all three countries costs less than copays with good US insurance.

The regulatory differences matter: Portugal and Spain follow EU approval processes, Mexico has streamlined generic approvals. Brand-name drugs take longer to reach market but generics arrive faster and cheaper.

The Social Security, Medicare, and Tax Maze

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Here's where expat healthcare planning gets complex. Social Security payments continue to most countries (Cuba, North Korea, and a few others excluded), but Medicare only covers care within the US, Puerto Rico, and US Virgin Islands.

Medicare Enrollment Deadlines

Miss these, and you'll pay penalties forever:

If you're living abroad when you turn 65, you can delay Part B enrollment without penalty only if you have "creditable coverage" through employment. Retirement abroad doesn't qualify.

The Coverage Gap Dilemma

Living in Portugal with SNS coverage means great local care, but:

Real scenario: James, 68, lives in Mérida, Mexico with IMSS coverage. His wife in Seattle has a heart attack. He flies back, but his Medicare Part B lapsed two years ago. The emergency room visit and cardiac catheterization cost $47,000 out-of-pocket because he's not Medicare-eligible and his Mexican coverage doesn't apply.

Tax Residency Complications

Become a tax resident of Portugal, Spain, or Mexico, and your healthcare choices affect your US tax obligations:

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Real Costs: Three Expat Scenarios

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Let's model actual annual healthcare costs for three common expat profiles, comparing total US costs versus Portugal, Spain, and Mexico.

Scenario 1: Healthy 62-Year-Old Couple

US baseline: $8,400 annually (employer insurance premiums + routine care)

Annual savings: Portugal $5,960-$7,960, Spain $5,562-$8,015, Mexico $6,550-$7,950

Scenario 2: 67-Year-Old with Diabetes and Hypertension

US baseline: $9,200 (Medicare + Supplement + medications + specialist visits)

Annual savings: Portugal $8,837, Spain $8,848, Mexico $8,570

Scenario 3: 59-Year-Old with Previous Cancer History

US baseline: $12,600 (individual marketplace plan + high deductible + ongoing monitoring)

Annual savings: Portugal $8,640-$11,940, Spain $7,980-$11,720, Mexico $9,000-$10,200

The numbers don't lie, but they don't tell the whole story either. These scenarios assume successful visa applications, no emergency US returns, and stable health conditions. Factor in visa costs ($2,000-$5,000), potential Medicare late enrollment penalties (10% annually for life), and emergency evacuation insurance ($500-$800 yearly), and your first-year transition costs increase significantly.

What Actually Changes When You Move

Moving to Portugal, Spain, or Mexico can cut your healthcare costs by 60-85%, but the transition requires serious financial and legal planning. The winners are healthy retirees with stable income who commit to residency requirements and accept 3-6 month waiting periods for non-emergency procedures.

The losers? Anyone who moves impulsively without understanding Medicare enrollment deadlines, visa income requirements, or gaps in international coverage. Portugal's residency process takes 6-12 months, Spain's non-lucrative visa requires proving you won't work, and Mexico's requirements vary dramatically by consulate.

Your healthcare costs abroad versus United States comparison should factor in total transition costs, not just the sunny-day scenarios. For those who plan properly, the savings are real, substantial, and permanent. Don't expect "free" healthcare on day one—or ever, really. Universal systems require universal contributions, whether through taxes, premiums, or residency commitments.

The question isn't whether you'll save money on healthcare abroad. It's whether you're willing to navigate the complexity to get there.


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