Skip to content

Montenegro · Gesundheitssystem

Gesundheitsversorgung in Montenegro

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

Bevor Sie nach Montenegro ziehen, ist die entscheidende Frage nicht „ist die Versorgung gut“ — sondern „kann ich sie mit einem befristeten Visum tatsächlich nutzen, und was passiert im Notfall?“. Hier steht, wie das System für einen Nomaden funktioniert und wo die private Versicherung ins Bild passt.

Auf einen Blick

System
Gemischt öffentlich/privat
Öffentlicher Zugang (Nomaden)
Nach Anmeldung als Ansässige:r
Notrufnummer
124 (ambulance / Hitna medicinska pomoc); 112 (general EU emergency)
Privater Hausarztbesuch
~€25
Versorgung auf Englisch
Englische Versorgung in Großstädten

So funktioniert das System

Montenegro runs a three-tier public health system (primary health centres / domovi zdravlja, general and specialised hospitals, and the tertiary Clinical Centre of Montenegro in Podgorica) administered by the state Health Insurance Fund (Fond za zdravstveno osiguranje Crne Gore, FZO/HIF) under the Ministry of Health. It was historically a Bismarck-style social health insurance system, but compulsory health-insurance payroll contributions were abolished with effect from 1 January 2022, so public healthcare is now financed largely from the general state budget/taxation and entitlement to publicly financed care is based on residence rather than contribution payments. Reported coverage exceeds 95% of the resident population. A sizeable and growing private sector operates alongside the public system, mainly in Podgorica and the coastal towns.

A growing private sector concentrated in Podgorica and the coast (e.g. Codra Hospital and Medical Centar Budva) offers shorter waits, modern equipment and English-speaking staff, and is the channel most temporary residents and nomads use for routine care. A private GP/specialist consultation is commonly cited at roughly EUR 20-30, though tariffs vary by clinic and treating tourists/short-stay foreigners can carry large mark-ups, so confirm prices in advance. Local voluntary private health insurance (VHI) is also available (reported from around EUR 300/year for basic plans, e.g. Uniqa), and many expats hold international plans for private access and medical evacuation. Figures are indicative, drawn from expat guides rather than an official tariff.

Core structural facts are well corroborated, including by tier-1 authorities: WHO/Europe confirms that public-care entitlement is residence-based (not contribution-based) consistent with the 1 Jan 2022 abolition of compulsory contributions, and UK government travel advice confirms the registration/certificate-of-entitlement mechanism at the Health Insurance Fund and the emergency number. Emergency numbers (124 ambulance, 112 general) and the three-tier FZO-administered structure are also corroborated across multiple sources. Cost figures (private GP ~EUR 20-30, VHI ~EUR 300/year) and quality characterisations come from expat/industry guides rather than an official FZO tariff, so they are indicative; hence medium overall confidence. The official FZO site (fzocg.me) is the authoritative source for current coverage rules but is Montenegrin-language.

Gut zu wissen

  • Public Health Insurance Fund (FZO) coverage is open to temporary-residence-permit holders, but you must file a separate registration application with the Fund - holding a permit alone is not enough, and proof of deregistration from your home-country health insurance is typically required.
  • Compulsory health-insurance contributions were abolished from 1 January 2022; public healthcare is now financed largely from the general budget and entitlement is residence-based, with reported coverage exceeding 95% of the population.
  • Ambulance/medical emergencies: call 124 (Hitna); the general EU emergency number 112 also works (UK government advice lists 112 for an ambulance) and routes through the national 112 centre.
  • Private clinics in Podgorica and the coast (e.g. Codra, Medical Centar Budva) commonly have English-speaking staff and are the route most nomads use for routine care, with consultations often around EUR 20-30.

Worauf Sie achten sollten

  • Tourists and short-stay visitors are not covered by the public system: emergency care is self-paid unless a reciprocal agreement applies (the UK has one, but it still requires a certificate of entitlement from the Health Insurance Fund), and treating foreigners can carry large mark-ups, so travel/health insurance is strongly advised.
  • Public-system access requires both an approved residence permit and active registration with the Health Insurance Fund; public coverage lapses when the residence permit expires and must be re-applied for on renewal.
  • Out-of-pocket spending is high: WHO/Europe found catastrophic health spending in roughly 1 in 10 households (driven mainly by outpatient medicines), so even insured residents can face significant costs.
  • English is mainly reliable in private urban clinics; in the public system and in smaller towns, English-speaking staff cannot be assumed, so plan for a possible language barrier.

🩺 Versicherung, die Sie brauchen

Da befristet Ansässige sich kaum auf das öffentliche System stützen können und das DNV eine Deckung verlangt, ist die private Krankenversicherung Teil des Umzugs — kein nachträglicher Gedanke. Wir listen die Tarife, die die Anforderung von Montenegro plausibel erfüllen, sortiert nach Passung.

Qualifizierende Tarife für Montenegro ansehen →

Gesundheitsversorgung in Montenegro: FAQ

Gesundheitsversorgung in Montenegro: FAQ

Kann ich als digitaler Nomade das öffentliche Gesundheitswesen in Montenegro nutzen?

Kurz gesagt — Sie können das öffentliche System nutzen, sobald Sie sich als ansässig registrieren; davor verlassen Sie sich auf private Versorgung. A growing private sector concentrated in Podgorica and the coast (e.g. Codra Hospital and Medical Centar Budva) offers shorter waits, modern equipment and English-speaking staff, and is the channel most temporary residents and nomads use for routine care. A private GP/specialist consultation is commonly cited at roughly EUR 20-30, though tariffs vary by clinic and treating tourists/short-stay foreigners can carry large mark-ups, so confirm prices in advance. Local voluntary private health insurance (VHI) is also available (reported from around EUR 300/year for basic plans, e.g. Uniqa), and many expats hold international plans for private access and medical evacuation. Figures are indicative, drawn from expat guides rather than an official tariff.

Wie lautet die Notrufnummer in Montenegro?

124 (ambulance / Hitna medicinska pomoc); 112 (general EU emergency). Rufen Sie sie bei lebensbedrohlichen Notfällen an; Notaufnahmen behandeln Sie unabhängig von der Versicherung, aber Ihnen kann nachträglich eine Rechnung gestellt werden, wenn Sie nicht versichert sind.

Brauche ich eine private Krankenversicherung in Montenegro?

Ja — über die Vernunft hinaus verlangt das DNV sie (erforderlich (ausdrücklich)). Siehe die qualifizierenden Tarife für Montenegro.

Quellen