# Health insurance for expats in Thailand: a practical guide

> How long-stayers in Chiang Mai choose health insurance: Thai vs international insurers, inpatient cover, visa rules and pre-existing conditions.

Sooner or later, every long-stayer in Chiang Mai has the same quiet realisation: the travel policy that felt so reassuring at the airport was never designed for the life you are actually living now. Health insurance is one of the least glamorous parts of moving abroad, and one of the most consequential. One thing before we begin: **this is general information, not financial or medical advice** — compare policies carefully and verify current visa requirements with official sources such as Thai immigration or your embassy.

## Why travel insurance runs out of road

Travel insurance is built around a trip — a departure date, a return date and a home country where your "real" healthcare lives. That architecture shows. Most policies cap a single trip at a set number of days, many quietly require you to remain a resident of your home country, and some stop covering you altogether after months of continuous time abroad. Crucially, there is no continuity: a policy bought year by year can decline to renew after a big claim — precisely when you need it most. We've written about [what travel insurance does well](/blog/travel-insurance-chiang-mai) — short stays, lost luggage, an emergency flight home. Living here is a different problem, and it needs a different tool.

![An expat weighing a slim travel-insurance booklet against a thick health-policy folder on a desk](/blog/health-insurance-expats-thailand/visual.webp)

## Thai insurers or international expat cover?

Most expats end up choosing between two broad routes. Thai domestic insurers price their policies in baht, tend to be noticeably cheaper, and usually offer smooth direct billing at local private hospitals — you show your card and walk out without paying upfront. The trade-offs: cover is generally limited to Thailand or the region, entry age limits can be strict, and renewal terms deserve close reading. International expat insurers cost more, but the policy typically travels with you if you move countries, limits are higher, and many offer guaranteed lifetime renewal once you're accepted. Neither route is objectively better; it depends on whether Thailand is a chapter of your life or the whole book.

## Inpatient, outpatient, and what you're actually buying

Policies split care into two buckets. Inpatient (IPD) cover pays when you are admitted to hospital — surgery, intensive care, serious illness: the events that can genuinely ruin you financially. Outpatient (OPD) cover pays for clinic visits, consultations and prescriptions. In Chiang Mai, [everyday care is remarkably affordable](/blog/healthcare-chiang-mai) — a routine consultation at a private hospital often costs less than a nice dinner out — which is why many long-stayers buy inpatient-only cover and pay for the small stuff in cash. OPD cover adds real cost to a premium; whether it earns its keep depends on how often you actually see a doctor.

## Where visas and insurance collide

Some Thai visas come with insurance strings attached. The best-known example is the O-A retirement visa, which has carried a mandatory health-insurance requirement for several years — with minimum coverage levels and insurer paperwork that have changed more than once since it was introduced. Other long-stay routes have their own rules, and details can vary between embassies and immigration offices. We won't quote figures here precisely because they move: if your visa route involves an insurance requirement, verify the current rules directly with Thai immigration or your embassy before buying anything. If you're weighing up [retirement in Chiang Mai](/blog/retiring-in-chiang-mai), build that checking step into your planning early.

## Pre-existing conditions: moratorium or full underwriting

Insurers handle your medical history in one of two ways, and the difference matters. Under a moratorium approach, you skip the medical questionnaire; anything pre-existing is automatically excluded, though some policies will cover an old condition again after a defined period with no symptoms, treatment or advice. Under full medical underwriting, you declare your entire history upfront and the insurer lists its exclusions in writing — more paperwork, but you know exactly where you stand before a claim, not after. Whichever route you take, disclose honestly: **non-disclosure is the classic reason claims get refused**. If you have an ongoing condition, this section of a policy deserves more attention than the price.

![A doctor and patient talking calmly in a bright Chiang Mai hospital consultation room](/blog/health-insurance-expats-thailand/visual-2.webp)

## The deductible is your friend

Here is the quiet logic that makes premiums manageable: insure the catastrophe, not the sniffles. Chiang Mai's private hospitals cost far less than their Western equivalents, but "cheaper than home" is not the same as cheap — intensive care can run to tens of thousands of baht per day, and major surgery can climb into the hundreds of thousands. Those are the sums insurance exists for. A higher deductible (the amount you pay before the policy kicks in) can cut premiums substantially, and if you've read our [cost-of-living breakdown](/blog/cost-of-living-chiang-mai), you'll know routine medical bills sit comfortably within most budgets here. Pick the largest deductible you could absorb without stress, and spend the savings on higher overall limits.

## Questions to ask before you sign

A short interrogation list for any policy, Thai or international:

- Is renewal guaranteed for life, or can the insurer drop me after a claim or at a certain age?
- Which Chiang Mai hospitals offer direct billing on this plan?
- What exactly is excluded — and can I have that in writing?
- How are premiums likely to rise as I get older?
- Does it cover medical evacuation to Bangkok if I ever need care Chiang Mai can't provide?
- What happens to my cover if I move to another country?

None of this is thrilling reading, but an hour of it now buys years of not thinking about it later. That, in the end, is what good insurance is for: the freedom to get on with your life here — and let the paperwork sit quietly in a drawer.
