How Colombian healthcare is structured
Colombia has universal healthcare through a dual-tier system:
- EPS (Entidad Promotora de Salud): The public-private health insurance layer. Contributions are 12.5% of monthly income for self-employed, split 8.5/4% employer/employee for salaried workers. Every legal resident must be enrolled. Benefits are legally guaranteed under a single national plan (POS) covering primary care, specialists, most medications, surgery, hospitalization, and maternity.
- Prepagada: Private top-up insurance sold by the same companies that run EPSs (Sura, Colsanitas, Coomeva, MediSanitas). It gives you direct access to top hospitals, English-speaking doctors, and zero-wait appointments.
- International insurance: Foreign-issued policies (Cigna, GeoBlue, IMG Global) that cover you in Colombia and worldwide. Used mostly by short-term residents and high-income retirees who want medevac coverage.
The big insight: EPS is world-class for the price but comes with the friction of the public system (waits, triage, referrals). Prepagada removes the friction for 300,000–700,000 COP/month. The overwhelming majority of Medellin's long-term foreign residents run EPS + prepagada together.
EPS: public health insurance
Enrollment is mandatory for anyone with a cedula de extranjeria (including tourists on a visa-approved extension or an in-process visa). You sign up at any EPS office or online. The biggest EPSs available in Medellin in 2026:
- Sura EPS - the most respected in Antioquia, densest network, strongest reputation for prompt referrals.
- Nueva EPS - one of the largest nationally, solid for retirees.
- Coosalud, Sanitas, Compensar - smaller but with good Medellin coverage.
What EPS covers
The POS (Plan Obligatorio de Salud) is broad: primary care, specialist consultations, hospitalization, surgery, mental health, maternity, pediatrics, most medications, physical therapy, dentistry for cleanings and some basic procedures, and emergency care. It does not include most cosmetic procedures, experimental treatments, some dental beyond basic, and some vision corrections.
What it costs
For self-employed foreigners on a visa, the contribution is 12.5% of declared monthly income, with a floor set at 1 SMMLV of declared income. In 2026 that floor is 1,555,000 COP × 12.5% = ~194,375 COP / month (USD 47). The ceiling is 25 SMMLV of declared income, putting the top-end contribution around 4,860,000 COP / month (USD 1,185). Most Rentista/Nomad holders declare at or near the 3x SMMLV income floor (4,665,000 COP), so the realistic contribution is about 583,000 COP / month (USD 142).
Employees have 4% deducted automatically from payroll; employers pay 8.5%. Pensionados (retirees) pay 12% of pension income.
How it actually works in Medellin
You pick a primary care center (IPS) when enrolling - IPS Sura Clínica las Vegas, IPS Prado, or whichever is nearest your home. Your GP is at that center and refers out to specialists. Specialist waits are 1–4 weeks; urgent care is same-day. Prescriptions are filled for free or at copay (500–5,000 COP) at affiliated pharmacies.
The pain point: if you need a specialist who's popular (dermatology, gastro, orthopedics) the wait can stretch to 6–8 weeks. This is where prepagada earns its keep.
Prepagada: private top-up insurance
Prepagada is sold by the same companies as EPS but as a separate contract. In exchange for a monthly premium, you get:
- Direct access to any doctor in the prepagada network - no GP referral needed
- Appointments same-week or same-day for most specialties
- Private rooms for hospitalization
- Access to the top private hospitals in Medellin (see our hospitals guide)
- English-speaking doctors on most panels
The main plans in Medellin (2026 prices)
| Plan | Age 30 | Age 50 | Age 65 | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sura Prepagada Plan Integral | ~340,000 | ~490,000 | ~810,000 | The gold standard in Antioquia. Network includes Pablo Tobón Uribe, Clínica las Américas, El Rosario. |
| Colsanitas Medicina Prepagada | ~310,000 | ~460,000 | ~790,000 | National network; strong in Bogota, solid in Medellin. |
| Coomeva Medicina Prepagada | ~280,000 | ~420,000 | ~720,000 | Cheaper, smaller Medellin network. |
| MediSanitas | ~350,000 | ~510,000 | ~830,000 | Sanitas's premium tier, widely accepted. |
Prices are monthly COP per person. Family plans get ~10–15% discounts. All require underwriting: pre-existing conditions may be excluded for the first 1–2 years, and certain high-risk conditions (active cancer treatment, dialysis) aren't accepted at all.
What prepagada doesn't cover
Major pre-existing conditions (for the exclusion period), cosmetic surgery, dental beyond basic, fertility treatments, and catastrophic care beyond the annual cap (typically 400 million–1 billion COP). For most expats those caps are never reached; when they're, EPS picks up the rest - which is the whole point of running both.
International insurance (Cigna, GeoBlue, IMG)
For foreigners who spend less than half the year in Colombia, travel frequently, or want guaranteed evacuation to the US/EU for major care, international insurance is the alternative.
Plans foreigners in Medellin most commonly use
- Cigna Global - USD 180–600/month depending on age and deductible. Covers Colombia and most of the world. Optional US coverage add-on.
- GeoBlue Xplorer Select - BlueCross-backed, strong US–Americas coverage, USD 220–700/month. Popular with American retirees.
- IMG Global Medical - cheapest entry (from USD 90–120/month young/high-deductible), covers Colombia but with narrower networks.
- Bupa Global - premium, USD 400–1,200/month, white-glove service for high-income movers.
When international insurance is worth it
- You spend <6 months in Colombia per year and still need coverage elsewhere
- You want the option to fly home for major surgery and have it covered
- You've pre-existing conditions that EPS/prepagada underwriting excludes
- Age 65+ and the prepagada premiums have become prohibitive
When it's not worth it: if you live in Colombia full-time, EPS + prepagada delivers better day-to-day access for 30–60% of the cost.
Side-by-side comparison
| EPS alone | EPS + Prepagada | International | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost (age 40) | ~485,000 COP | ~485k + 420k = 905,000 COP | USD 250–450 (~1.1–2M COP) |
| Access time, routine specialist | 2–4 weeks | Same week | Same day |
| Access time, urgent | Same day | Same day | Same day |
| Private hospital rooms | No (shared) | Yes | Yes |
| English doctors | Rare | Common | Common |
| Covers outside Colombia | No | No | Yes |
| Pre-existing exclusions | None (POS required) | 1–2 years | Policy-specific |
| Evacuation | No | No | Yes (most plans) |
The stack most foreigners end up with
After three or four years, most long-term residents in Medellin settle on one of three setups:
- EPS Sura alone. Chosen by those on a tight budget or who already have a good IPS (primary care center) near home. ~485,000 COP/month at the income floor.
- EPS Sura + Sura Prepagada. The default for anyone earning a middle-class salary or better. 900,000–1,300,000 COP/month total for a person age 35–55. Everything is easy; the system quietly disappears in the background.
- International (Cigna/GeoBlue) + pay-cash-at-private-hospitals. For half-year residents, frequent travelers, and people over 65 who want global coverage. More expensive but simpler for high-mobility life.
Typical out-of-pocket costs in Medellin (2026)
Even without insurance, paying cash at a top private hospital in Medellin is often cheaper than US insurance copays. Approximate 2026 prices:
| GP consultation | 80,000–180,000 COP (USD 20–45) |
| Specialist consultation | 180,000–350,000 COP (USD 45–88) |
| Emergency room visit (uncomplicated) | 250,000–500,000 COP (USD 63–125) |
| MRI scan | 550,000–900,000 COP (USD 140–225) |
| Basic bloodwork panel | 80,000–150,000 COP (USD 20–38) |
| Dental cleaning + exam | 120,000–200,000 COP (USD 30–50) |
| Crown (porcelain) | 1,200,000–2,000,000 COP (USD 300–500) |
| LASIK (both eyes) | 5,500,000–7,500,000 COP (USD 1,400–1,900) |
| Knee replacement | 18,000,000–30,000,000 COP (USD 4,500–7,500) |
| Maternity (uncomplicated delivery, private) | 8,000,000–16,000,000 COP (USD 2,000–4,000) |
Common mistakes
- Waiting too long to enroll in EPS. Technically required within 30 days of your cedula. Fines and retroactive payments apply.
- Declaring too high an income for EPS. You pay 12.5% of whatever you declare. Many self-employed foreigners over-declare and pay 3x what they need to.
- Skipping prepagada until a health problem. Prepagada underwrites you at application. Pre-existing conditions are excluded. Enroll while healthy.
- Assuming international insurance covers routine care well. Most international plans have US-centric deductibles. In Colombia, paying cash is often cheaper than filing a claim.
- Letting EPS lapse for one month while abroad. Restarts your pre-existing clock for prepagada. Worth paying the minimum contribution to keep continuity.
FAQ
- Can I enroll in EPS before getting my cedula?
- Not easily. You need a cedula or PPT. As a tourist, you're covered by travel insurance (required for the visa) until the cedula arrives.
- Do I need prepagada at all?
- For emergencies and major surgery, EPS is genuinely excellent. Prepagada mostly buys you speed and nicer hospital rooms. If you're healthy, active, and patient, EPS alone is fine.
- Is EPS coverage accepted at private hospitals?
- Yes, but at the public-tier rooms and process. Prepagada upgrades you to private rooms and direct specialist access at the same hospitals.
- What about Medicare?
- US Medicare doesn't cover any care outside the US. If you keep Medicare, you're paying premiums in the US for zero coverage while in Colombia. Most long-term US retirees in Medellin suspend Part B.
- Can I combine EPS, prepagada, AND international insurance?
- Yes, and some wealthy retirees do. Uncommon because it's usually cheaper to simply pay cash for anything EPS+prepagada doesn't cover.
- What about emergencies if I'm not yet enrolled?
- Private hospitals will treat you and bill you. Public emergency rooms are obligated to treat anyone in a life-threatening situation regardless of coverage.
See also: Best Hospitals in Medellin, Visa guide, Residency path.