Avant de vous installer à South Africa, la question qui compte n'est pas « les soins sont-ils bons » — c'est « puis-je, avec un visa temporaire, réellement y accéder, et que se passe-t-il en cas d'urgence ? » Voici comment le système fonctionne pour un nomade, et où s'insère l'assurance privée.
En un coup d'œil
- Système
- Deux niveaux : public + privé
- Accès public (nomades)
- Non — assurance privée nécessaire
- Numéro d'urgence
- 112
- Consultation généraliste privée
- ~€27
- Soins en anglais
- Largement disponible en anglais
Comment fonctionne le système
South Africa runs a two-tier system: a large, tax-funded public sector that the state caters to for roughly 71% of the population (primary care free at clinics and community health centres, means-tested fees at higher-level public hospitals), and a smaller private sector funded through medical-aid schemes and out-of-pocket payment. Only about 16% of the population belongs to a medical-aid scheme. A National Health Insurance (NHI) Act was signed into law in May 2024 but is being phased in and is not yet implemented.
The private sector (hospital groups such as Netcare, Mediclinic and Life Healthcare) offers high-standard care, modern facilities and short waiting times, and is what nomads and visitors typically use, paying out-of-pocket or via travel/international health insurance. A private GP consultation typically costs around R350-R700 (roughly EUR 19-37); one 2023 survey of practices found an average of about R514 with individual fees ranging from R300 to R750.
Care is highly uneven: the private sector is regarded as world-class but serves only the insured minority, while the underfunded public sector that most of the population relies on faces chronic medicine and staff shortages and long waiting times (U.S. ITA / trade.gov, 2024).
Bon à savoir
- English is an official language and the working language of the private medical sector, so English-speaking care is easy to find
- Private hospitals in major cities (Cape Town, Johannesburg, Durban) offer world-class facilities and short waits
- Emergency medical treatment cannot be legally refused to anyone under the Constitution, regardless of nationality
- Private GP visits are inexpensive by Western standards (roughly EUR 19-37; survey average about R514)
À surveiller
- Visitors on tourist/temporary-stay visas are not entitled to free higher-level public care and are charged full fees (no income means-test), so private insurance is effectively required; primary care at public clinics is nominally free to all
- Public hospitals are overcrowded and underfunded with long waiting times - not a practical option for nomads
- Quality and access differ sharply between the well-resourced private sector and the strained public sector
- Two emergency numbers exist (112 from cellphones routes to a call centre; 10177 is the dedicated national ambulance line, 10111 the police line) - confirm the local response number on arrival
🩺 L'assurance dont vous aurez besoin
Comme les résidents temporaires ne peuvent guère s'appuyer sur le système public, et que le Remote Work exige une couverture, l'assurance santé privée fait partie de l'installation — pas un détail à régler après coup. Nous listons les formules qui répondent vraisemblablement à l'exigence de South Africa, classées par adéquation.
Voir les formules admissibles pour South Africa →La santé à South Africa : FAQ
La santé à South Africa : FAQ
Puis-je utiliser la santé publique à South Africa en tant que nomade numérique ?
En bref — le système public n'est pas ouvert aux résidents temporaires, l'assurance santé privée est donc la voie à suivre. The private sector (hospital groups such as Netcare, Mediclinic and Life Healthcare) offers high-standard care, modern facilities and short waiting times, and is what nomads and visitors typically use, paying out-of-pocket or via travel/international health insurance. A private GP consultation typically costs around R350-R700 (roughly EUR 19-37); one 2023 survey of practices found an average of about R514 with individual fees ranging from R300 to R750.
Quel est le numéro d'urgence à South Africa ?
112. Appelez-le pour les urgences vitales ; les services d'urgence vous prendront en charge quelle que soit votre assurance, mais vous pourrez être facturé ensuite si vous n'êtes pas couvert.
Ai-je besoin d'une assurance santé privée à South Africa ?
Oui — au-delà de la simple prudence, le Remote Work l'exige (obligatoire en pratique). Voir les formules admissibles pour South Africa.
Sources
- International organisation Migrant and Refugee Access to Public Healthcare in South Africa (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government South Africa Healthcare - National Health Insurance (U.S. International Trade Administration) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government Emergency Contacts - George Municipality (South African local government) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Media Does SA's private healthcare sector only serve 16% of the population? (Africa Check) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government President's signing of National Health Insurance Bill, 15 May 2024 (South African Government) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Media The cost of being sick in South Africa (private GP consultation costs) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Media South African Rand (ZAR) to Euro (EUR) Exchange Rate History 2026 (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15