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Panama · Health System

Healthcare in Panama

Partially verified Last verified June 15, 2026 Reviewed by Henry van de Vorming

Before you move to Panama, the question that matters isn't "is the healthcare good" — it's "can I, on a temporary visa, actually use it, and what happens in an emergency?" Here's how the system works for a nomad, and where private insurance fits.

At a glance

System
Mixed public/private
Public access (nomads)
Only with social-security contributions
Emergency number
911
Private GP visit
~€37
Care in English
English care in major cities

How the system works

Panama runs a segmented public health system with a large private sector. The public side has two arms: the Caja de Seguro Social (CSS), a Bismarck-style social-insurance fund financed by payroll contributions that covers the formally employed and their dependents (the larger share of the insured population), and the Ministry of Health (MINSA), which delivers tax-funded, low-cost services to everyone else, including the uninsured and foreigners. The two run parallel facility networks; PAHO notes weak coordination between them and a 2019 decree (Executive Decree No. 290 of 9 July 2019) aimed at coordinating their services. Out-of-pocket spending is high, accounting for about 37% of total health expenditure (2021), reflecting heavy reliance on private clinics and hospitals, which are concentrated in Panama City.

Panama has a well-developed private sector centered on Panama City, used by most expats and nomads. Private hospitals offer modern facilities, short waits and English-speaking staff, with many physicians trained in the US or Europe. Two Panama City hospitals have held Joint Commission International (JCI) accreditation since 2011 — Hospital Punta Pacifica (Pacifica Salud), the only Central American hospital affiliated with Johns Hopkins Medicine International, and Hospital San Fernando. Private GP consultations typically run about USD 20-60 in the cities (less in rural areas), and a private ER visit can run higher; routine care is affordable by US/European standards, but major surgery, ICU or complex care can approach US prices, so robust international or local private insurance is strongly advised. Most private hospitals require payment in advance or proof of insurance.

PAHO (Health in the Americas) classifies Panama's system as segmented between MINSA and the social-security fund CSS, with public health spending around 5.4% of GDP (5.38% in 2021) and out-of-pocket spending about 37% of total health expenditure in 2021 — a high share that signals significant private financing and coverage gaps in the public system. Quality is uneven: Panama City hosts JCI-accredited, internationally affiliated private hospitals, while rural public facilities are more basic and waits in the public system can be long. The private GP cost is a mid-range estimate aggregated from non-official expat/insurance sources and varies widely by provider.

Good to know

  • Private hospitals in Panama City are high quality, with two JCI-accredited facilities (Hospital Punta Pacifica, affiliated with Johns Hopkins Medicine International, and Hospital San Fernando) and many US/Europe-trained, English-speaking doctors.
  • MINSA public clinics and ERs are open to everyone, including foreigners and tourists, at very low cost — a basic public GP visit can be roughly USD 9-11 and a public ER visit around USD 50-100.
  • Private care is affordable for routine needs by US/European standards: a private GP consultation is typically about USD 20-60 in the cities.
  • Emergency response runs through SUME 911, the national pre-hospital ambulance system, reachable on 911.

Watch out for

  • A temporary resident or nomad cannot join CSS (the contributory social-insurance fund) — that requires being a formally employed permanent resident who pays into it — so plan to rely on out-of-pocket payment, MINSA public clinics, or private health insurance.
  • Quality and English-speaking care are concentrated in Panama City; rural public facilities are more basic and may have longer waits and limited English.
  • Major surgery, ICU or complex private care can approach US prices, and private hospitals typically demand payment up front or proof of insurance — comprehensive international/private cover is strongly advised.
  • Public ambulance coverage via SUME 911 can be slow given traffic and road conditions outside the capital; private ambulance services exist as an alternative.

🩺 Insurance you'll need

Because temporary residents largely can't lean on the public system, and the Remote Worker Visa requires cover, private health insurance is part of the move — not an afterthought. We list the plans that plausibly meet Panama's requirement, ranked by fit.

See qualifying plans for Panama →

Healthcare in Panama: FAQ

Healthcare in Panama: FAQ

Can I use public healthcare in Panama as a digital nomad?

In short — the public system is open only if you pay into the social-security/health scheme — most nomads use private cover instead. Panama has a well-developed private sector centered on Panama City, used by most expats and nomads. Private hospitals offer modern facilities, short waits and English-speaking staff, with many physicians trained in the US or Europe. Two Panama City hospitals have held Joint Commission International (JCI) accreditation since 2011 — Hospital Punta Pacifica (Pacifica Salud), the only Central American hospital affiliated with Johns Hopkins Medicine International, and Hospital San Fernando. Private GP consultations typically run about USD 20-60 in the cities (less in rural areas), and a private ER visit can run higher; routine care is affordable by US/European standards, but major surgery, ICU or complex care can approach US prices, so robust international or local private insurance is strongly advised. Most private hospitals require payment in advance or proof of insurance.

What is the emergency number in Panama?

911. Call it for life-threatening emergencies; emergency departments will treat you regardless of insurance, but you may be billed afterwards if you're not covered.

Do I need private health insurance in Panama?

Yes — beyond being prudent, the Remote Worker Visa requires it (required (explicit)). See the qualifying plans for Panama.

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