Skip to content

Turkey · Système de santé

La santé à Turkey

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

Avant de vous installer à Turkey, 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
Assurance maladie sociale (Bismarck)
Accès public (nomades)
Non — assurance privée nécessaire
Numéro d'urgence
112
Consultation généraliste privée
~€50
Soins en anglais
Soins en anglais dans les grandes villes

Comment fonctionne le système

Turkey runs a Bismarck-style social health insurance system. Since the 2003 Health Transformation Program and the 2008 merger of the old funds, a single payer — the Social Security Institution (Sosyal Güvenlik Kurumu, SGK) — administers Universal Health Insurance (Genel Sağlık Sigortası, GSS), financed mainly by employer and employee payroll contributions plus government subsidies for those who cannot pay. Coverage is near-universal (by 2021 roughly 88% via public insurance, and close to 99% counting all schemes). The Ministry of Health steers the system centrally and runs the public hospital and family-medicine primary-care network; out-of-pocket spending is modest (patients paid directly for roughly 15% of service fees historically), with small co-payments on prescriptions and some services. A large, internationally accredited private hospital sector operates in parallel and is where most expats and medical tourists are treated.

Turkey has one of the world's largest private healthcare and medical-tourism sectors, with more JCI-accredited hospitals than any country outside the United States (commonly cited at around 40-50, concentrated in Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir and Antalya). Major groups include Acıbadem, Memorial and Medipol. Private facilities offer short waits, modern equipment, international-patient departments with translators, and many internationally trained, English-fluent physicians. For temporary and nomad residents, private care (out-of-pocket or via private insurance) is the default route, since public GSS enrollment is not available in the first year. A private GP/clinic consultation typically runs about €30-55, rising toward €80 at premium private hospitals; online consultations are roughly €15-30. Care is generally regarded as good value, often well below Western-European or US prices.

Turkey achieved near-universal coverage (rising from around two-thirds of the population insured in 2002 to roughly 88% via public insurance by 2021, and close to 99% counting all schemes) through the Health Transformation Program, which markedly expanded access and financial protection; quality and physician supply remain uneven between major cities and rural areas, and primary-care gatekeeping is comparatively weak.

Bon à savoir

  • Unified national emergency number 112 (free, 24/7, with English-trained operators in major cities and tourist regions); emergency care is provided at state hospitals regardless of insurance status.
  • Very large, high-quality private sector: more JCI-accredited hospitals (around 40-50) than any country outside the US, with English-speaking, often internationally trained doctors in major cities.
  • Affordable private care for nomads — a private GP consult is roughly €30-55 and online consults €15-30, well below Western-European/US prices.
  • Near-universal public coverage via single-payer SGK/GSS, the result of the 2003 Health Transformation Program.

À surveiller

  • No public (SGK/GSS) access for short-term residents: voluntary enrollment is only possible after one full year of continuous legal residence (students may join sooner). Nomads cannot use public care on this basis in year one.
  • A residence permit (ikamet) requires valid private health insurance covering the whole stay for applicants under 65 — without it the permit is not issued or renewed (minimum coverage thresholds were raised in 2025).
  • The European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) is NOT valid in Turkey; EU travelers need separate travel/private cover.
  • English-speaking care is reliable mainly in private/JCI hospitals in big cities; public facilities and rural areas offer limited English, and out-of-pocket prices are often higher for non-residents.

🩺 L'assurance dont vous aurez besoin

Comme les résidents temporaires ne peuvent guère s'appuyer sur le système public, et que le DNV 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 Turkey, classées par adéquation.

Voir les formules admissibles pour Turkey →

La santé à Turkey : FAQ

La santé à Turkey : FAQ

Puis-je utiliser la santé publique à Turkey 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. Turkey has one of the world's largest private healthcare and medical-tourism sectors, with more JCI-accredited hospitals than any country outside the United States (commonly cited at around 40-50, concentrated in Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir and Antalya). Major groups include Acıbadem, Memorial and Medipol. Private facilities offer short waits, modern equipment, international-patient departments with translators, and many internationally trained, English-fluent physicians. For temporary and nomad residents, private care (out-of-pocket or via private insurance) is the default route, since public GSS enrollment is not available in the first year. A private GP/clinic consultation typically runs about €30-55, rising toward €80 at premium private hospitals; online consultations are roughly €15-30. Care is generally regarded as good value, often well below Western-European or US prices.

Quel est le numéro d'urgence à Turkey ?

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 Turkey ?

Oui — au-delà de la simple prudence, le DNV l'exige (obligatoire en pratique). Voir les formules admissibles pour Turkey.

Sources