In an emergency:112any language, any phone 061medical emergencies
Golden hour over Ibiza, with the old town walls above a calm bay and the Mediterranean beyond.
Ibiza, Balearic Islands

Healthcare in Ibiza, for English speakers.

Where to go in an emergency, what you are entitled to with a GHIC, which clinics work in English, and what to do if you have run out of your medication.

In short: if you fall ill in Ibiza, dial 112 in any language for an emergency, or visit a pharmacy or a private English-speaking clinic for everyday problems. UK visitors use a GHIC for free state care, but it does not cover private treatment or a flight home, so travel insurance still matters. If you have run out of medication you already take, there are calm, legal ways to sort it out.

Start here

What should I do if I fall ill in Ibiza?

It depends on how urgent the problem is and whether you are visiting or resident, with one island twist: the most complex cases are sometimes transferred to Mallorca or the mainland.

For anything sudden or serious, call 112. For minor problems a pharmacy or out-of-hours primary care point is usually enough, and the island has private clinics geared to visitors, including telemedicine. The public service is the Servei de Salut de les Illes Balears, known as IB-Salut.

Short-stay visitors use a UK GHIC or EHIC for medically necessary public care. Residents who are registered use IB-Salut like any local.

Your entitlement

What does the GHIC cover in Spain after Brexit?

A UK Global Health Insurance Card (GHIC) gives you state healthcare in Spain on the same terms as a local: emergency and medically necessary treatment that cannot reasonably wait until you are home, including a flare-up of a condition you already have. It does not cover private hospitals, it will not fly you home, and it is not travel insurance.

The GHIC is the post-Brexit replacement for the old European Health Insurance Card (EHIC). If you still hold a valid EHIC issued before the transition ended, you can keep using it in Spain until it expires, then replace it with a GHIC. Both are free, and you should be suspicious of any website that charges for one; apply only through the NHS. Think of the card as a floor rather than a ceiling: it catches you in an emergency in the public system, and that is all it is designed to do.

If you live here, the picture changes. UK state pensioners and certain posted workers can register for full Spanish public cover using the S1 form, which the UK funds on your behalf; the clearest starting point is the UK government's Living in Spain guide, the single most useful page the government publishes for residents. Everyone else settling here either pays into the public system through the convenio especial, takes out private insurance, or both. In practice, registration means getting your empadronamiento at the town hall, your residency document (the TIE), and a social-security number before a local health centre will issue your health card.

Your GHIC coversYour GHIC does not cover
Emergency and medically necessary state treatmentAny treatment in a private hospital or clinic
Care at the same cost a local Spaniard pays (often free)An air ambulance or flight home to the UK
A flare-up of a pre-existing condition during your stayPlanned treatment you travelled to Spain to receive
Maternity care that becomes necessary while you are hereCancelled flights, lost baggage or a cut-short trip
The GHIC is a floor, not a ceiling: state care only, no private hospitals, and it will never fly you home.

When it cannot wait

Where do I go in a medical emergency in Ibiza?

Call 112, free, from any phone, any time. It is the one number for ambulance, police and fire, and the medical line 061 reaches the same emergency system.

The island’s main public hospital with a 24-hour emergency department is Hospital Can Misses in Ibiza town. It handles most emergencies, but for the most serious or specialist cases, patients can be transferred to Mallorca or the mainland, by air when necessary.

Out of hours, urgent but non-emergency problems are covered by primary care points; in the busy summer the island adds capacity, but expect queues. Take your passport or identity document and your GHIC, EHIC or insurance details.

Care in your language

Can I find English-speaking healthcare in Ibiza?

Yes. So much of the island’s life is international that many doctors and pharmacists, especially in tourist areas, are used to English, though in the public system it is not guaranteed and paperwork will be in Spanish or Catalan.

There are private clinics and doctors on the island aimed at visitors, some offering home visits or telemedicine in English. To find providers independently noted as English-speaking, the UK Foreign Office publishes a list of English-speaking doctors and facilities covering Ibiza, which is a sensible neutral starting point.

In an emergency, language is not a barrier: 112 and hospital A&E will treat you whatever you speak.

From your hotel or apartment

How do I see an English-speaking doctor online in Spain?

If your problem is not an emergency and you would rather not sit in a waiting room, you can see an English-speaking doctor online in Spain by video, phone or message, often the same day. A licensed Spanish doctor can assess you remotely and, where appropriate, issue an electronic private prescription you collect at any Spanish pharmacy.

Online doctor services, or telemedicine, have quietly become one of the easiest ways for tourists, expats and digital nomads to get unhurried medical care in their own language, without local insurance and without losing a day of the holiday to a waiting room. A typical online consultation in Spain can cover a minor illness, a travel or sick-note medical certificate, a specialist referral, or a continuation supply of medication you already take. What a responsible online doctor will not do is handle emergencies, prescribe controlled medicines such as strong painkillers or sleeping tablets, or treat young children remotely; for anything urgent you still call 112 and seek care face to face.

For the most common need, continuing a medication you already take and have simply run out of, the most direct route is The Holiday Doctor, in the section just below. For broader needs that fall outside a continuation supply, such as a minor illness, a travel or sick-note medical certificate, or a specialist referral, a travellers' telemedicine service like MyDoctor-In offers video and message consultations with bilingual doctors and electronic prescriptions valid at pharmacies in Spain and across the European Union, without needing Spanish insurance.

Teeth

Is there an English-speaking dentist in Ibiza?

Adult dental care is almost entirely private in Spain, and Ibiza has private dentists used to international patients. The public system covers only urgent problems such as pain, infection and trauma, plus children.

For routine treatment and out-of-hours dental emergencies you will use a private dentist and pay directly. The Balearic dental college, the Col·legi Oficial de Dentistes de les Illes Balears, lists practitioners and duty clinics; the Foreign Office list of English-speaking doctors and facilities also flags some English-speaking dentists.

A little Spanish goes a long way

Useful Spanish words at the doctor or pharmacy

You do not need fluent Spanish to get good care in Ibiza, but a handful of words make everything smoother, and they are the terms you will see on signs and hear on the phone.

Getting seen

Urgencias: accident and emergency. Centro de salud: the local public health centre, where a state GP is based. Médico de cabecera: your GP or family doctor. Cita: an appointment. Seguro médico: health insurance. Tarjeta sanitaria: the Spanish public health card.

At the pharmacy

Farmacia: pharmacy, marked by a flashing green cross. Farmacia de guardia: the out-of-hours pharmacy on the night rota. Receta: a prescription. Sin receta: available without a prescription. Dolor: pain. Fiebre: fever. Mareo: dizziness or nausea.

The most common holiday worry

I have run out of my medication in Spain. What can I do?

Start at a pharmacy. Spanish pharmacists are highly trained, and many medicines that are prescription-only in the UK are available over the counter in Spain, so a short conversation often solves the problem on the spot.

Where that is not enough, and the medicine is one you already take regularly, you have options that do not involve cutting your trip short or going without. A private Spanish doctor can review your situation, and an online clinical review with a Spanish-registered, English-speaking doctor is often the quickest, calmest route to a continuation supply of the medication you already take, where it is safe and clinically appropriate to provide one. Bring the name of your medication (ideally the generic name, since brands differ between countries) and, if you have it, a copy of your most recent prescription or repeat slip. A Spanish private electronic prescription is issued through REMPe, the national electronic prescription registry, and can be dispensed at any pharmacy in the country.

Forgotten, lost or run out of your regular medication?

The Holiday Doctor is an English-language service run from Spain for adults who are physically in Spain and need continuity of medication they already take. A Spanish-registered, English-speaking doctor reviews your request online, and where safe and clinically appropriate, can issue a private Spanish prescription you can collect at any pharmacy.

Visit The Holiday Doctor
Before you use any online doctor service
  • Adults physically in Spain only.
  • Not an emergency service. Call 112 for urgent or life-threatening symptoms.
  • A prescription is not guaranteed. Requests are assessed by a doctor, and some medicines or situations require in-person care.

If it is on your mind

Can I look after my weight while I am here?

Managing your weight is best done with medical supervision and a plan you can keep, rather than alone or on impulse while away from home.

If this is something you are thinking about, it is worth doing it properly. Nivelta is a Spain-based clinical service offering a remote medical review and ongoing follow-up with a doctor for medically supervised weight management. It is a clinical service rather than a shop: whether any treatment is appropriate depends entirely on a clinician's assessment of your individual situation, your medical history and your safety. For the everyday side of looking after yourself, the next section is a better place to start.

The gap the card leaves

Do I still need travel insurance if I have a GHIC?

Yes. The GHIC covers state treatment only. It will not pay to repatriate you, it does not cover private hospitals, and it covers none of the ordinary disasters of travel.

An air ambulance back to the UK can run to tens of thousands of pounds, and if the public queue is long or the nearest available bed is private, you may end up paying privately for care the card does not touch. Most insurers now expect you to carry a valid GHIC anyway, and some waive your excess if you use it, so the two work together rather than in competition. The UK's Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office travel advice for Spain sets out the current position, and it is worth a glance before you travel for any entry rules in force at the time.

Staying well

How do I stay healthy while I am in Ibiza?

Most problems that bring visitors to an Ibiza emergency room in summer are preventable: heat, dehydration, too much sun, and the consequences of a heavy night out. Pace yourself, drink water between anything else, keep out of the fiercest sun, and look after the people you are with.

For minor things that do not need a doctor, a Spanish pharmacy with its green cross is the right first stop. Bring any regular medication in its original packaging with a copy of your prescription, since island restocking can take time, and keep your GHIC or insurance details on your phone.

Being straight with you

What an online doctor cannot help with

Some situations need a person in the room, and it is important to be honest about them.

An online clinical review is not for emergencies; for anything urgent or life-threatening you call 112, not a website. It is not for under-18s, and it is not the route to start a brand-new, high-risk medicine for the first time, which needs proper in-person assessment. It cannot help anyone who is not physically in Spain. And a prescription is never automatic: a doctor reviews each request, and where a medicine or a situation needs face-to-face care, the honest answer is to say so and point you to it. None of this is small print. It is the difference between a service that is safe and one that is not.

Quick questions

Frequently asked questions

Is healthcare free in Ibiza for UK visitors?

State emergency and medically necessary care is free or low-cost with a valid UK GHIC or EHIC. Private care is not covered and the card will not pay to fly you home, so travel insurance is still needed.

What number do I call in an emergency in Ibiza?

Dial 112 from any phone, free, at any hour, for ambulance, police and fire. The medical line 061 reaches the same emergency system.

Which hospital in Ibiza has A&E?

The island’s main public hospital with a 24-hour emergency department is Hospital Can Misses in Ibiza town.

What happens if I need care the island cannot provide?

For the most serious or specialist cases, IB-Salut can transfer patients from Ibiza to Mallorca or the mainland, by air when necessary.

How do I find a pharmacy open at night in Ibiza?

Pharmacies rotate an on-duty service (farmàcia de guàrdia). The Balearic pharmacists’ college publishes the duty rota so you can find one open near you.

Can a pharmacist in Ibiza give me prescription medicine?

A pharmacist can advise on minor illness and sell non-prescription remedies, but prescription-only medicines need a prescription from a doctor.

I have run out of my regular medication in Ibiza, what can I do?

A doctor will need to issue a Spanish prescription first. An online doctor may be able to help with a continuation supply of a medicine you already take, where it is safe and clinically appropriate. A prescription is not guaranteed.

Is summer a bad time to need a doctor in Ibiza?

Services are busiest from July to September, when the population surges and emergency rooms fill with visitors. Care is still there, but expect longer waits, so for minor issues plan ahead and carry insurance.

Check it yourself

Useful organisations and official sources

This page points you to the authorities so you can confirm anything that matters for your own situation. Rules and entitlements change, so the official source is always the final word.

AA
Medically reviewed by Dr Adam Abbs, Medical Director.
Registered with the Colegio de Médicos de Madrid (ICOMEM 282889105), the General Medical Council UK (GMC 7078829), the Irish Medical Council (IMC 429282) and the College of Family Physicians of Canada (CFPC 720470).
Last reviewed: 31 May 2026.